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CATALOGUE
AND
GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENT
I9O7-I908
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CONTENTS
Trustees ....
Standing Committees .
University Council .
Officers of Administration
Emeritus Officers
Administrative Board of the Summer Session
Administrative Board of Extension Teaching
Advisory Committee on Art
Members of Faculties and TeachingJStaff
General Statement ....
Historical ....
Organization ....
Schools and Faculties
Divisional Organization
Announcements
General Regulations
Academic Discipline .
Attendance ....
Registration ....
Withdrawal ....
Fees .....
Laboratory Fees
Students' Expenses ....
Committee on Employment for Students
Appointment Committees .
Relations between the University and Other Institu
tions ......
Public Lectures .
The Library .
University Commons ....
Residence Halls .
Other Living Accommodations . • ,
Medical Visitor ....
Earl Hall .....
Public Worship and Religious,,Work
Student Organizations
Divisional and Departmental Statements
Introductory .....
PAGE
xi
xii
xiii
xiv
xvi
xvi
xvi
xvi
i
21
21
22
22
25
25
26
26
26
26
27
27
29
30
30
31
32
35
35
37
37
38
38
39
39
39
41
41
IV
CONTENTS
Departments of Instruction — Continued
Anatomy .
42
Anthropology
45
Architecture
46
Astronomy
49
Bacteriology and Hygiene
5°
Biological Chemistry .
5i
Botany
53
Chemistry
57
Civil Engineering
62
Clinical Instruction, Courses in Dermatology, Genito-Uri-
nary Diseases, Laryngology, Ophthalmology, Ortho-
pedic Surgery, and Otology . . . . .66
Clinical Pathology
68
Comparative Literature
69
Diseases of Children
7i
Domestic Art ....
72
Domestic Science
72
Economics and Social Science
72
Education ....
75
Electrical Engineering
80
Engineering Drafting .
83
English .....
83
Fine Arts .....
87
Geography ....
87
Geology .....
87
Germanic Languages and Literatures
89
Greek .....
93
Gynecology ....
95
Histology and Embryology
96
History and Political Philosophy .
96
Hospital Economics .
99
Latin . .
100
Law ......
103
Municipal or Private Law-
103
Public Law and Jurisprudence
104
Mathematics ....
106
Mechanical Engineering
109
Metallurgy
in
Mineralogy
113
Mining .
114
Music
117
Nature Study
118
Neurology
118
Obstetrics .
119
CONTENTS
V
PAGE
Departments of Instruction — Continued
Oriental Languages ......
I20
Chinese .......
I20
Indo-Iranian Languages ....
121
Semitic Languages .....
122
Pathology .......
125
Pharmacy .......
127
Pharmacology, Materia Medica, and Therapeutics .
. 128
Philosophy and Psychology ....
I30
Physical Education ......
135
Physics ........
I36
Physiology .......
I40
Practice of Medicine ......
142
Romance Languages and Literatures
143
Surgery ........
. I48
Zoology ........
• IS©
Entrance Examinations ......
154
General Statement ......
154
Application for Examination
154
Fee
155
Division of Examinations .....
155
Places of Examination .....
156
Examination Subjects .....
156
Schedule of Examinations ....
156
Submission of Note-books, Drawings, etc.
158
Definitions of the Requirements in each Subject
158
Regulations for the University Degrees
164
Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy
164
Master of Laws ......
169
Columbia College .......
171
The Faculty
171
Admission .......
172
Certificates in Lieu of Entrance Examinations
174
Advanced Standing .....
174
To Special Courses .....
174
Entrance Conditions and Probation
175
Program of Studies ......
175
Prescribed Courses .....
I76
Options in the Professional Schools
177
Additional Credit for High Standing .
I78
Examinations in Course ....
178
Grades and Credit ......
179
Honors .........
179
Register of Students .......
l8l
School of Law .........
193
The Faculty
193
VI
CONTENTS
School of Law — Continued
Other Officers ....
Purposes of the School
Program of Studies
Practice Courts
Requirements for Admission
To Advanced Standing
Non-Matriculated Students
Curriculum
Examinations
Degrees
Law Library
Register of Students
School of Medicine (College of Physicians and Surgeons)
The Faculty
Historical Statement ....
Buildings, Grounds, and Equipment
Vanderbilt Clinic ....
Sloane Maternity Hospital .
Clinics at Hospitals ....
Lectures ......
General Plan of Instruction
Requirements for Admission
Advanced Standing .
As Special Students .
Requirements for Graduation
Degree of Master of Arts
Course of Study ....
Summer Session in Medicine
Register of Students ....
Schools of Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry
The Faculty ....
Courses ......
Admission .....
Collegiate Preparation
Requirements without Collegiate Preparation
Advanced Standing .
Special Courses
Rules Governing Students
Equipment and Collections .
Outline of Professional Courses of Study
Register of Students ....
Faculty of Political Science
The Faculty
General Statement ....
CONTENTS
Vll
Faculty of Political Science — Continued
Admission and Attendance . .250
Courses of Instruction
251
Seminars
251
Yale-Columbia Courses
251
Faculty of Philosophy
253
The Faculty
253
General Statement
255
Courses of Study and Research
255
Faculty of Pure Science
256
The Faculty
256
General Statement
257
Special Regulations of the Faculty
258
• Non-matriculated Students
258
Courses of Study ....
259
Register of Students under the Faculties oi
f POLITICAl
Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science
260
Faculty of Fine Arts ....
287
Faculty .....
287
General Statement
288
Admission ....
289
Advanced Standing
289
Non-matriculated Students
289
Examinations ....
290
School of Architecture
290
General Statement
290
Admission . .
291
Candidacy for the Degree .
291
Course for the Certificate .
291
Students from Other Institutions
292
Program of Studies .
292
Bachelor of Architecture .
292
Certificate in Architecture .
• 293
Architectural School of Engineering
• 294
Graduate Courses
• 294
School of Music ....
295
General Statement
• 295
Equipment
295
Admission
296
Degree of Bachelor of Music
296
Certificate in Music .
296
Program of Studies .
296
School of Design
• 297
Equipment
297
Admission
■ 297
Vlll
CONTENTS
School of Design — Continued
Curriculum for Certificate
Program of Studies
Studio Work
Register of Students .
School of Architecture
School of Music
Barnard College
Trustees
Standing Committees
Officers of Instruction
Officers of Administration
General Statement
Admission
Entrance Conditions
Advanced Standing
Special Students
Matriculation, Registration, Fees
Dormitory
Program of Studies
Options in the Professional Schools
Register of Students .
Teachers College
Trustees
The Faculty
Other Officers of Instruction
Officers of Administration
Officers of Teachers College Schools
General Statement
Buildings and Equipment
Register of Students .
College of Pharmacy
Officers and Trustees .
Officers of Instruction
Officers of Administration
General Statement
Admission
Method of Instruction
Register of Students .
Summer Session
Administrative Board
Officers of Instruction
Assistants
General Statement
Fees
CONTENTS
IX
Summer Session — Continued
Summer Courses in Medicine
Summary of Registration
Extension Teaching .
Administrative Board
Officers of Instruction
General Statement
Courses of Instruction
Credit Courses
Lecture Courses
Degrees Conferred during 1906-07
Honorary Degrees
Commencement Calendar, 1907
Fellowships, Scholarships, and Other Provision
Assistance and Reward of Students
General Regulations .
University Fellowships
Special Fellowships
University Scholarships
Special Scholarships
Medals and Prizes
Scholarships and Prizes in Columbia College
Award of Honors, Columbia College, 1907
Scholarships and Prizes m the School of Law
Fellowships, Scholarships and Prizes in the College of
Physicians and Surgeons
Scholarships and Prizes in the Schools of Mines, Engineer
ing, and Chemistry
Scholarships and Fellowships in the School of Archi
tecture ......
Barnard College: Scholars, Honors, and Prizes
Teachers College: Fellows and Scholars
University Bibliography . . . . .
Official Publications .....
Columbia University Press
Publications, Contributions, and Serial Studies
Journals .......
Student Publications .....
Special Funds . . . . . . " .
Academic Calendar ......
Summary of Officers and Students
Index ........
365
365
366
366
366
367
368
369
369
37o
38S
385
386
386
386
388
393
395
396
398
404
404
405
408
409
411
413
416
416
418
418
423
427
429
437
439
441
TRUSTEES
Chairman
George L. Rives 14 West 38th Street
Clerk
John B. Pine 63 Wall Street
Rev. Morgan Dix, S.T.D., D.C.L., D.D. (Oxon.)..a7 West 25th Street
F. Augustus Schermerhorn 25 Liberty Street
Gerard Beekman 419 Madison Avenue
Edward Mitchell 31 East 50th Street
W. Bayard Cutting 32 Nassau Street
Seth Low, LL.D 30 East 64th Street
George L. Rives 14 West 38th Street
Lenox Smith 25 Broad Street
John Crosby Brown, LL.D 59 Wall Street
Rt. Rev. Henry C. Potter, D.D., LL.D. (Cantab.)
113 West 40th Street
Rev. Marvin R. Vincent, S.T.D 20 East 92d Street
J ohn B. Pine 63 Wall Street
Hermann H. Cammann 51 Liberty Street
Rev. Edward B. Coe, D.D., LL.D 42 West 52d Street
William Barclay Parsons 60 Wall Street
George G. DeWitt 39 West 51st Street
Francis Sedgwick Bangs 35 Wall Street
Benjamin Aymar Sands 31 Nassau Street
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D., (Cantab.) Litt.D. (Oxon.)
Columbia University
J. Pierpont Morgan 3 Broad Street
John Stewart Kennedy 31 Nassau Street
T. Matlack Cheesman, M.D Garrison-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Horace W. Carpentier 108 East 37th Street
Marcellus Hartley Dodge 315 Broadway
Treasurer
John McLean Nash 63 Wall Street
Office of the Trustees 63 Wall Street
Standing Committees
1907
[Note. — The date after each name indicates the expiration of term of office.]
ON FINANCE
Mr. Mitchell (1909), Chairman
Mr. Cammann (1908) Mr. Rives (1911)
Mr. Kennedy (1910) Mr. Bangs (1912)
on buildings and grounds
Mr. Low (1910), Chairman
Mr. Schermerhorn (1908) Mr. Pine (1912)
Mr. Kennedy (1909) The President (ex-officio)
on honors
Rev. Dr. Dix (1908), Chairman
Mr. Rives (1909) Rev. Dr. Vincent (191 1)
Rev. Dr. Coe (1910) Mr. Low (1912)
on education
Rev. Dr. Coe (191 1), Chairman
Mr. Parsons (1908) Dr. Cheesman (1910)
Mr. Pine (1909) Rev. Dr. Vincent (1912)
Mr. Rives (ex-officio)
The President (ex-officio)
ON THE LIBRARY
The President (ex-officio), Chairman
Rev. Dr. Coe (1909) Mr. Beekman (191 1)
Mr. Carpentier (19 10) Mr. De Witt (191 2 )
Secretary, the Librarian
UNIVERSITY COUNCIL
[Note.— The date after each name indicates the expiration of term of office.]
The President of the University
From Columbia College
Professor J. Howard Van Amringe, Dean
Professor Calvin Thomas (1910), Secretary of the Council
From the Faculty of Law
Professor George W. Kirchwey, Dean
Professor Francis M. Burdick (1910)
From the Faculty of Medicine
437 West 59th Street
Dr. Samuel "W. Lambert, Dean
Dr. "Walter B. James (1910)
From the Faculty of Applied Science
Frederick A. Goetze, M.Sc., Dean
Professor Henry S. Munroe (1910)
From the Faculty of Political Science
Professor John W. Burgess, Dean
Professor Munroe Smith (1910)
From the Faculty of Philosophy
Professor Edward Delavan Perry, Dean
Professor George R. Carpenter (1910)
From tJze Faculty of Pure Science
Professor William Hallock, Dean
Professor Cassius J. Keyser (1910)
From the Faculty of Fine Arts
Professor James R. Wheeler, Acting Dean
From Barnard College
Miss Laura Drake Gill, Dean
Professor William T. Brewster, Acting Dean
Professor James Harvey Robinson (1909)
From Teachers College
Professor James Earl Russell, Dean
Professor Gonzalez Lodge (1908)
From tlie College of Pharmacy
Dean Henry H. Rusby, M.D., 115 West 68th Street
From the Union Theological Seminary
President Charles Cuthbert Hall, D.D., 700 Park Avenue
From the General Theological Seminary
Dean Wilford L. Robbins, D.D., Chelsea Square
OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D., (Cantab.) Litt.D. (Oxon.)
President of the University
John W. Burgess, Ph.D., LL.D.
Dean of the Faculty of Political Science
J. Howard Van Amringe, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D.
Dean of Columbia College
George W. Kirchwey, A.B.
Dean of the Faculty of Law
Edward Delavan Perry, Ph.D., LL.D.
Dean of the Faculty of Philosophy
Samuel W. Lambert, M.D. ,
Dean of the Faculty of Medicine
William Hallock, Ph.D.
Dean of the Faculty of Pure Science
Frederick Arthur Goetze, M.Sc.
Dean of the Faculty of Applied Science
James Rignall Wheeler, Ph.D.
Acting Dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts
i Laura Drake Gill, A.M., D.C.L.
Dean of Barnard College
William T. Brewster, A.M.
Acting Dean of Barnard College
James Earl Russell, Ph.D., LL.D.
Dean of Teachers College
Henry H. Rusby, M.D.
Dean of the College of Pharmacy
Frederick Paul Keppel, A.B.
Secretary of the University
Rudolf Tombo, Jr., Ph.D.
Registrar of the University
Edward T. Boag
Assistant Registrar at the College of Physicians and Surgeons
Charles S. Danielson
Bursar
Edward K. Hayt, A.M.
Assistant Bursar at the College of Physicians and Surgeons
Frederick Arthur Goetze, M.Sc.
Consulting Engineer
Henry Lee Norris, M.E.
Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds
Anna E. H. Meyer, A.B.
Secretary of Barnard College
N. W. Liggett, A.B.
Bursar of Barnard College
Agnes Opdyke, A.B.
Registrar of Barnard College
1 Absent on leave
xiv
OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION XV
Clydb Furst, M.A.
Secretary of Teachers College
Theodora George
Assistant Registrar, Teachers College
Thomas F. Main
Secretary of the College of Pharmacy
Harry B. Ferguson, Phar.D.
Assistant Secretary of the College of Pharmacy.
Librarian of the University
James Hulme Canfield, LL.D., Litt.D. (Oxon.)
Acting Chaplain of the University
Rev. George Ashton Oldham
Medical Director of the Gymnasium
George Louis Meylan, A.M., M.D.
Comptroller of Student Organizations
Frederick Arthur Goetze, M.Sc.
Secretary of Earl Hall
Harry T. Baker, A.B.
University Medical Visitor
D. Stuart Dodge Jessup, M.D.
Adviser to Women Graduate Students
Laura Drake Gill, A.M.
Organist
Frank E. Ward
Officers of Administration, 32
(17 of whom are also educational
officers)
XVI OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION
Emeritus Officers
Edward Curtis, M.D Emeritus Professor of Materia Medica
and Therapeutics
John D. Quackenbos, A.M., M.D Emeritus Professor of Rhetoric
Nathaniel Lord Britton, Ph.D., Sc.D Emeritus Professor of
Botany
John Ordronaux, M.D., LL.D Emeritus Professor of Medical
Jurisprudence
James W. McLane, M.D Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics
George H. Baker, A.M Librarian Emeritus
Francis Delafield, M.D., LL.D Emeritus Professor of the
Practice of Medicine
Abraham Jacobi, M.D., LL.D. .Emeritus Professor of the Diseases of
Children
Herman Knapp, M.D Emeritus Professor of Ophthalmology
William R. Ware, LL.D Emeritus Professor of Architecture
George M. Lefferts, M.D., M.Sc. .Emeritus Professor of Laryngology
William T. Bull, M.D Emeritus Professor of Surgery
Alonzo Brayton Ball, M.D Emeritus Professor of Clinical
Medicine
Arthur H. Elliott, Ph.D., F.C.S. . .Emeritus Professor of Chemistry,
College of Pharmacy
Frederick R. Hutton, E.M., Ph.D., Sc.D. . . .Emeritus Professor of
Mechanical Engineering
Charles McBurney, M.D Emeritus Professor of Surgery
Robert F. Weir, M.D Emeritus Professor of Surgery
(i7)
Administrative Board of the Summer Session
President Nicholas Murray Butler Professor James E. Russell
Professor James C. Egbert Professor Rudolf Tombo, Jr.
Frederick P. Keppel
(5)
Administrative Board of Extension Teaching
Professor Adolphe Cohn Professor James E. Russell
Professor Franklin T. Baker Professor Herbert G. Lord
Professor Frederick H. Sykes
(5)
Advisory Committee on Art
Charles F. McKim, Litt.D.
Daniel C. French
Edwin H. Blashfield
(3)
MEMBERS OF FACULTIES AND TEACHING STAFF
NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER,
PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY
A.B., Columbia, 1882; A.M., 1883; Ph.D.. 1884; LL.D., Syracuse, 1898; Tulane,
1001; Johns Hopkins, Princeton, Yale, and University of Pennsylvania, 190a;
Chicago, 1903; Manchester and St. Andrew's, 1905; Cambridge, 1907; Litt.D.,
Oxford, 1905.
Professors
J. Howard Van Amringe Professor of Mathematics
A.B., Columbia, i860; A.M., 1863; L.H.D., 1890; Ph.D., University of the State
of New York, 1877; LL.D., Union, 1895.
Charles F. Chandler Mitchill Professor of Chemistry
A.M., Ph.D., Gottingen, 1856; M.D., University of New York, 1873; LL.D.
Union, 1873; Sc.D., Oxford, 1900.
John W. Burgess. . .Ruggles Professor of Political Science and Consti-
tutional Law
A.B., Amherst, 1867; A.M., 1870; LL.D., 1884; Ph.D., Princeton, 1883
Henry S. Munroe Professor of Mining
E.M., Columbia, 1869; Ph.D., 1876; Sc.D., 1904.
Munroe Smith Professor of Roman Law and Comparative
Jurisprudence
A.B., Amherst, 1874; A.M., 1880; LL.B., Columbia, 1877; LL.D., 1904; J.U.D.,
Gottingen, 1880.
John G. Curtis Professor of Physiology
A.B., Harvard, 1866; A.M., 1869; M.D., Columbia, 1870; LL.D., 1904.
1 Frank J. Goodnow . . Eaton Professor of Administrative Law and
Municipal Science
A.B., Amherst, 1879; A.M., 1886; LL.B., Columbia, 1882, cum laude; LL.D.,
1904.
Richard J. H. Gottheil. .Professor of Rabbinical Literature and the
Semitic Languages
A.B., Columbia, 1881; Ph.D., Leipzig, 1886.
Edwin R. A. Seligman. . . .McVickar Professor of Political Economy
A.B., Columbia, 1879; A.M., 1883; LL.B., 1884; Ph.D., 1884; LL.D., 1904.
Harry Thurston Peck. . . . Anthon Professor of the Latin Language
and Literature
A.B., Columbia, 1881; A.M., 1882; L.H.D., 1884; LL.D., 1904; Ph.D., Cum-
berland, 1883; LL.D., Alfred University, 1903.
William Henry Carpenter. . Villard Professor of Germanic Philology
A.B., Hamilton, 1881; Ph.D., Freiburg, 1881.
M. Allen Starr Professor of Neurology
A.B., Princeton, 1876; A.M., 1879; Ph.D., 1884; LL.D., 1899; M.D., Columbia,
1880; Sc.D., 1904.
Alfred D. F. Hamlin Professor of the History of Architecture
A.B., Amherst, 187s; A.M., 1885.
Alfred J. Moses Professor of Mineralogy
E.M., Columbia, 1882; Ph.D., 1890.
1 Absent on leave
I
2 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
George S. Huntington Professor of Anatomy
A.B., Trinity, 1881; A.M., 1884; M.D., Columbia, 1884; Sc.D., 1904; LL.D.
Jefferson Medical College, 1907. '
Herbert L. Osgood Professor of History
A.B., Amherst, 1877; A.M., 1880; LL.D., 1907; Ph.D., Columbia, 1889.
J. McKeen Cattell Professor of Psychology
A.B., Lafayette, 1880; A.M., 1883; LL.D., 1907; Ph.D., Leipzig, 1886.
Francis M. Burdick Dwight Professor of Law
A.B., Hamilton, 1869; LL.B., 1872; LL.D., 1895.
George W. Kirchwey Kent Professor of Law
A.B., Yale, 1877.
John Bassett Moore . . Hamilton Fish Professor of International Law
and Diplomacy
A.B., Virginia, 1880; LL.D., Yale, 1901.
Henry Fairfield Osborn Da Costa Professor of Zoology
A.B., Princeton, 1877; Sc.D., 1880; LL.D., Trinity College (Hartford), 1901;
Princeton, 1902; Columbia, 1907; Sc.D., Cambridge, 1904.
Edward Delavan Perry Jay Professor of Greek
A.B., Columbia, 1875; LL.D., 1904; A.M. and Ph.D., Tubingen, 1879.
Frank Dempster Sherman Professor of Graphics
Ph.B., Columbia, 1884.
William A. Dunning Lieber Professor of History and Political
Philosophy
A.B., Columbia, 1881; A.M., 1883; Ph.D., 1885; LL.D., 1904.
Abraham Valentine Williams Jackson. .Professor of Indo-Iranian
Languages
A.B., Columbia, 1883; A.M., 1884; L.H.D., 1885; Ph.D., 1886; LL.D., 1904.
Adolphe Cohn. .Professor of the Romance Languages and Literatures
B. es. L., Paris, 1868; LL.B., 1873; A.M., 1874.
Edmund B. Wilson Professor of Zoology
Ph.B., Yale, 1878; LL.D., 1901; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1881; LL.D., 1902;
LL.D., Chicago, 1901.
James Furman Kemp Professor of Geology
A.B., Amherst, 1881; Sc.D., 1906; E.M., Columbia, 1884.
Robert Peele Professor of Mining
E.M., Columbia, 1883.
William Hallock Professor of Physics
A.B., Columbia, 1879; Ph.D., Wurzburg, 1881; Phar.D., National College of
Pharmacy, 1892.
Brander Matthews Professor of Dramatic Literature
A.B., Columbia, 1871; LL.B., 1873; A.M.. 1874; LL.D., 1904; D.C.L., Univer-
sity of the South, 1899; Litt.D., Yale, 1901.
Francis B. Crocker Professor of Electrical Engineering
E.M., Columbia, 1882; Ph.D., 1895.
Michael Idvorsky Pupin Professor of Electro-Mechanics
A.B., Columbia, 1883; Sc.D., 1904; Ph.D., Berlin, 1889.
T. Mitchell Prudden Professor of Pathology
B.S.. Yale, 1872; M.D., 1875; LL.D., 1896.
William H. Burr Professor of Civil Engineering
C.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic, 1872.
Henry Alfred Todd Professor of Romance Philology
A.B., Princeton, 1876; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1885.
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION 3
George Rice Carpenter Professor of Rhetoric and English
Composition
A.B., Harvard. 1886; D.C.L., University of the South, 1907.
Franklin Henry Giddings Professor of Sociology and the
History of Civilization
A.B.. Union, 1877; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., 1897; LL.D.. Oberlin, 1900.
George F. Canfield Professor of Law
A.B., Harvard, 1875; LL.B., 1880.
iThomas Scott Fiske Professor of Mathematics
A.B.. Columbia, 1885; A.M., 1886; Ph.D., 1888.
Harold Jacoby Rutherfurd Professor of Astronomy
A.B., Columbia, 1885; Ph.D., iSgs-
John B. Clark Professor of Political Economy
A.B., Amherst, 1872; Ph.D., 1890; LL.D.. 1897; LL.D., Princeton, 1896.
James Rignall Wheeler. . .Professor of Greek Archaeology and Art
A.B., Vermont, 1S80; Ph.D., Harvard, 1885.
Frank N. Cole Professor of Mathematics
A.B., Harvard, 1882; A.M. and Ph.D., 1886.
James Harvey Robinson Professor of History
A.B., Harvard, 1887; A.M., 18S8; Ph.D., Freiburg, 1890.
Frederic S. Lee Professor of Physiology
A.B., St. Lawrence, 1878; A.M., 1881; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1885.
James Chidester Egbert Professor of Latin
A.B., Columbia, 1881; A.M., 1882; Ph.D., 1884.
Calvin Thomas. . .Gebhard Professor of the Germanic Languages and
Literatures
A.B., Michigan, 1874; A.M., 1877; LL.D., 1904.
Edwin B. Cragin Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology
A.B., Yale, 1882; A.M., (Hon.) 1907; M.D., Columbia, 1886.
Carlo Leonardo Speranza Professor of Italian
Licenziato del Liceo di Padova, 1861; J. D., Padua. 1866; A.M., Columbia. 1887.
'Bashford Dean Professor of Vertebrate Zoology
A.B., College of the City of New York, 1886; A.M., Columbia, 1889; Ph.D., 1890 _
2 Lucien Marcus Underwood Torrey Professor of Botany
Ph.B., Syracuse, 1877; Ph.M.,1.1878; Ph.D., 1879; LL.D. 1906.
William Milligan Sloane Seth Low Professor of History
A.B., Columbia, 1868; L.H.D., 1887; A.M. and Ph.D., Leipzig, 1S76; LL.D.
Princeton, 1903.
Henry Marion Howe Professor of Metallurgy
B.S., Harvard, i86g; A.M., 1872; LL.D., 1905: B.S., Mass. Institute of
Technology, 1S71; LL.D., Lehigh, 1905; LL.D., Harvard, 1905-
Charles E. Pellew Adjunct Professor of Chemistry
E.M., Columbia, 1884.
Earl B. Lovell Professor of Civil Engineering
C.E., Cornell, 1891.
Franz Boas Professor of Anthropology
Ph.D., Kiel, 1881.
James Hulme Canfield Librarian of the University
A.B., "Williams, 1868; A.M., 1877; LL.D., 1893; Litt.D., Oxford, 1902.
John Francis Woodhull. .Professor of Physical Science in Teachers
College
A.B., Yale, 1880; Ph.D., Columbia, 1800.
1 Absent on leave. 2]Died November 16. 1907
4 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
Franklin Thomas Baker Professor of the English Language and
Literature in Teachers College
A.B., Dickinson, 1885; A.M., 1889; A.M., Columbia, 1900.
Richard Elwood Dodge Professor of Geography
in Teachers College
A.B., Harvard, 1890; A.M., 1894.
Virgil Prettyman Principal of Horace Mann High School
with rank of Adjunct Professor in Teachers
College
A.B., Dickinson, 1892; A.M., 1895; Pd.D., 1905.
Charles Earl Bikle. .Adjunct Professor of Mathematics in Teachers
College
A.B., Dickinson, 1886; A.M., 1889.
James Earl Russell Barnard Professor of Education
A.B., Cornell, 1887; Ph.D., Leipzig, 1894; LL.D., Dickinson, 1903.
Helen Kinne Professor of Domestic Science in Teachers College
Mary Schenck Woolman Professor of Domestic Art in Teachers
College
'Frank M. McMurry Professor of Elementary Education in
Teachers College
Ph.D., Jena, 1889.
Charles Russell Richards Macy Professor of Manual Training
in Teachers College
B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1885.
Paul Monroe Professor of the History of Education in Teachers
College
B.S., Franklin, 1890; M.S., 1895; Ph.D., Chicago, 1897.
Samuel Train Dutton Professor of School Administration in
Teachers College
A.B., Yale, 1873; A.M., 1900.
•William P. Trent Professor of English Literature
M.A., Virginia, 1884; LL.D., Wake Forest, 1899; D.C.L., University of the
South, 1905
Herbert G. Lord Professor of Philosophy
A.B., Amherst, 1871; A.M., 1900.
Nelson Glenn McCrea Professor of Latin
A.B., Columbia, 1885; A.M., 1886; Ph.D., 1888.
Gonzalez Lodge . . . Professor of Latin and Greek in Teachers College
A.B., Johns Hopkins, 1883; Ph.D., 1886; LL.D., Franklin and Marshall, 1901.
Clarence H. Young Professor of Greek
A.B., Columbia, 1888; A.M., 1889; Ph.D., 1891.
Livingston Farrand Professor of Anthropology
A.B., Princeton, 1888; A.M., 1891; M.D., Columbia, 1891.
George Francis Sever Professor of Electrical Engineering
M.Sc, Columbia, 1905.
James Maclay Professor of Mathematics
C.E., Columbia, 1888; Ph.D., 1899.
Marston Taylor Bogert Professor of Organic Chemistry
A.B., Columbia, 1890; Ph.B., 1894.
J. Livingston Rutgers Morgan Professor of Physical
Chemistry
B.S., Rutgers, 1892; A.M. and Ph.D., Leipzig, 1895.
1 Absent on leave.
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION 5
'Benjamin Duryea Woodward Professor of the Romance
Languages and Literatures
A.B.. Columbia, 1888; A.M., i88g; Ph.D., 1891; B. es S., Sorbonne, 1885; B.
es L. 1886.
Henry E. Crampton Professor of Zoology
A.B.. Columbia, 1893; Ph.D., iSgg.
Edward Lee Thorndike Professor of Educational Psychology in
Teachers College
A.B., Wesleyan, 1895; A.B., Harvard, 1896; A.M., 1897; Ph.D., Columbia, 1898.
'Charles Hubert Farnsworth Adjunct Professor of Music in
Teachers College
Henry S. Redfield Nash Professor of Law
A.B., Amherst, 1877; A.M., 1887; LL.D., 1901.
'David Eugene Smith .Professor of Mathematics in Teachers College
Ph.B., Syracuse. 1881; Ph.M., 1884; Ph.D., 1S87; LL.D., 1905; M.Pd.,
Michigan State Normal, 1898.
Thomas Denison Wood Professor of Physical Education
A.B., Oberlin, 1888; A.M., 1891; M.D., Columbia, 1891.
Laura Drake Gill Dean of Barnard College
A.B., Smith College, 1881; A.M., 1885; D.C.L., University of the South, 1907.
Charles Thaddeus Terry Professor of Law
A.B., Williams, 1889; LL.B., Columbia, 1893.
Walter B. James Bard Professor of the Practice of Medicine
A.B., Yale, 1879; M.D., Columbia, 1883; LL.D., 1904; A.M. (Hon.) Yale, 1906.
William J. Gies Professor of Biological Chemistry
B.S., Pennsylvania College, 1893; M.S., 1896; Ph.B., Yale, 1894; Ph.D., 1897.
William T. Brewster Professor of English
A.B., Harvard, 1892; A.M., 1893.
George Clinton Densmore Odell Professor of English
A.B., Columbia, 1889; A.M., 1890; Ph.D., 1893.
Charles Knapp Professor of Classical Philology
A.B., Columbia, 1887; A.M., 1888; Ph.D., 1890.
L. Emmett Holt. . . .Carpentier Professor of the Diseases of Children
A.B., Rochester, 1875; A.M., 1878; M.D., Columbia, 1880; Sc.D., 1904.
Amadeus W. Grabau Professor of Palaeontology
S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1896; S.M., Harvard, 1898; S.D.,
1900.
Henry Rogers Seager Professor of Political Economy
Ph.B., Michigan, 1890; Ph.D., Pennsylvania, 1894.
Henry L. Moore Professor of Political Economy
A.B., Randolph-Macon, 1892; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1896.
John Dyneley Prince Professor of Semitic Languages
A.B., Columbia, 1888; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1892.
Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge Johnsonian Professor
of Philosophy
A.B., Amherst, 1889; A.M., 1898; LL.D., 1903.
Friedrich Hirth Dean Lung Professor of Chinese
A.M. and Ph.D., Rostock, 1869.
Felix Adler Professor of Social and Political Ethics
A.B., Columbia, 1870; Ph.D., Heidelberg, 1873-
1 Absent on leave
6 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
Julius Sachs Professor of Secondary Education in Teachers
College
A.B., Columbia, 1867; A.M., 1871; Ph.D., Rostock, 1871.
Ralph Edward Mayer... .Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Drawing
C.E., Columbia, 1879.
Ira H. Woolson Adjunct Professor of Civil Engineering
E.M., Columbia, 1885.
Herbert Maule Richards Professor of Botany
B.S., Harvard, 1892; Sc.D., 1895.
Gary N. Calkins Professor of Protozoology
B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1S90; Ph.D., Columbia, 1898.
Philip Hanson Hiss, Jr Professor of Bacteriology
A.B., Johns Hopkins, 1891; M.D., Columbia, 1895.
Margaret E. Maltby Adjunct Professor of Physics in Barnard
College
A.B., Oberlin, 1882; A.M., 1891; B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
1891; Ph.D., Gottingen, 1895.
Cassius Jackson Keyser Adrain Professor of Mathematics
B.S., Missouri, 1892; A.M., Columbia, 1896; Ph.D., 1901.
Herschel C. Parker Adjunct Professor of Physics
Ph.B., Columbia, 1890.
Charles Augustus Strong Professor of Psychology
A.B., Rochester, 1884; A.B., Harvard, 1885.
Marshall H. Saville. . . .Loubat Professor of American Archaeology
George L. Meylan. . . .Adjunct Professor of Physical Education and
Medical Director of the Gymnasium
M.D., New York University, 1896; B.S., Harvard, 1902; A.M., Columbia, 1904.
Ernest F. Nichols Professor of Experimental Phvsics
B.S., Kansas Agricultural College, 1888; M.S., Cornell, 1893; Sc.D., 1897; Sc.D.,
Dartmouth, 1903.
Christian A. Herter . .Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics
M.D., Columbia, 1885.
Elijah William Bagster-Collins . .Adjunct Professor of German in
Teachers College
A.B., Brown, 1897; A.M., Columbia, 1898.
Maurice A. Bigelow Professor of Biology in Teachers College
B.S., Ohio Wesleyan, 1894; M.S., Northwestern, 1896; Ph.D., Harvard, 1901.
Frederick H. Sykes Director of Extension Teaching and Pro-
fessor in Teachers College
A.B., Toronto, 1885; A.M., 1886; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1894.
Henry Carr Pearson Principal of Horace Mann Elementary
School with rank of Adjunct Pro-
fessor in Teachers College
A.B., Harvard, 1892.
Joseph A. Blake Professor of Surgery
A.B., Yale, 1885; Ph.B., 1886; M.D., Columbia, 1889.
Samuel W. Lambert Professor of Applied Therapeutics
A.B., Yale, 1880; Ph.B., 1882; A.M., 1905; M.D., Columbia, 1885.
George E. Brewer Professor of Clinical Surgery
A.B., Hamilton, 1881; A.M., 1882; M.D., Buffalo, 1884; M.D., Harvard, 1885.
Virgil P. Gibney Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery
A.B., Kentucky, 1869; A.M., 1872; LL.D., 1899; M.D., Bellevue, 1871.
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION 7
William K. Simpson Professor of Laryngology
M.D., Columbia, 1880.
Arnold H. Knapp Professor of Ophthalmology
A.B., Harvard, 1889; M.D., Columbia, 1892.
Gorham Bacon Professor of Otology
A.B., Harvard, 187s; M.D., Bellevue, 1878.
James R. Hayden Professor of Genito-Urinary Diseases
M.D., Columbia, 1884.
Eugene Hodenpyl Adjunct Professor of Pathological Anatomy
M.D., Columbia. 1885.
Hermann T. Vulte Adjunct Professor of Domestic Science in
Teachers College
Ph.B., Columbia, 18S1; Ph.D., 1885.
Francis Carter Wood Professor of Clinical Pathology
B.S., Ohio State, 1891; M.D., Columbia, 1894.
Lea McIlvaine Luquer Adjunct Professor of Mineralogy
C.E., Columbia, 1887; Ph.D., 1894.
Louis Auguste Loiseaux Adjunct Professor of the Romance
Languages and Literatures
B.S., Dijon, 1894.
William Addison Hervey Adjunct Professor of the Germanic
Languages and Literatures
A.B., Columbia, 1893; A.M., 1894.
Frederick R. Bailey Adjunct Professor of Histology and
Embryology
A.B., Princeton, 1892; A.M., 1893; M.D., Columbia, 1895.
Rudolf Tombo, Jr. . . .Adjunct Professor of the Germanic Languages
and Literatures
B.S., College of the City of New York, 1895; M.S., 1899; A.M., Columbia, 1893;
Ph.D., 1901.
Bradley Stoughton Adjunct Professor of Metallurgy
Ph.B., Yale, 1893; B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1896.
John Angus Mac Vannel Professor of the Philosophy of Edu-
cation in Teachers College
A.B., Toronto, 1S93; A.M., 1894; Ph.D., Columbia, 1898.
Russell Burton-Opitz Adjunct Professor of Physiology
M.D., Chicago, 1895; B.S., 1898; M.S., 1902; Ph.D., 1905.
Leonard Beecher McWhood Adjunct Professor of Music
A.B., Columbia, 1893.
Joel Elias Spingarn. . .Adjunct Professor of Comparative Literature
A.B., Columbia, 1895; Ph.D., 1899.
Maximilian K. Kress Adjunct Professor of Architecture
A.M., Rutgers, 1895.
George N. Olcott Adjunct Professor of Latin
A.B., Columbia, 1893; Ph.D., 1899.
Thomas Hunt Morgan Professor of Experimental Zoology
B.S., State College of Kentucky, 1886; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1891.
1 George Stuart Fullerton Professor of Philosophy
B.A., Pennsylvania, 1879; M.A., 1882; B.D., Yale, 1883; Ph.D., Muhlenburg,
1892; LL.D., 1900.
Jefferson B. Fletcher Professor of Comparative Literature
A.B., Harvard, 1887; A.M., 1889.
• Absent on leave.
8 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
Harry McMahon Painter Professor of Clinical Obstetrics
A.B.. Yale, 1884; Ph.B., 1885; M.D., Columbia, 1888.
Charles Lane Poor Professor of Astronomy
B.S., College of the City of New York, 1886; M.S., 1890; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins,
1892.
Cornelius Rubner Professor of Music
Arthur Wesley Dow. . . .Professor of Fine Arts in Teachers College
John Dewey Professor of Philosophy
A.B., Vermont, 1879; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1884; LL.D., University of
Wisconsin, 1904.
Henry H. Rusby Professor of Materia Medica in the College
of Pharmacy
M.D., University Medical College of New York, 1884.
Virgil Coblentz Professor of Chemistry in the College of
Pharmacy
A.B., Wittenberg, 1880; Ph.G., Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1882:
Phar.M., 1894; A.M., Ph.D., University of Berlin, 1891.
George C. Diekman Professor of Pharmacy in the College of
Pharmacv
Ph.G., New York College of Pharmacy, 1888; M.D., Columbia, 1891.
John Oehler Adjunct Professor of Chemistry in the College
of Pharmacy
Ph.G., New York College of Pharmacy, 1879.
James S. C. Wells .Adjunct Professor of Analytical Chemistry
Ph.B., Columbia, 187s; Ph.D., 1877.
Joseph C. Pfister Adjunct Professor of Mechanics
A.B., Columbia, 1889; A.M., 1890.
Henry Clapp Sherman Professor of Organic Analysis
B.S., Maryland Agricultural College, 1893; A.M., Columbia, 1896; Ph.D., 1897.
William Robert Shepherd Adjunct Professor of History
A.B., Columbia, 1893; A.M., 1894; Ph.D., 1896.
Frank Leo Tufts Adjunct Professor of Physics
B.S., Antioch, 1891; A.B., Harvard, 1894; A.M., Columbia, 1896; Ph.D., 1897.
James T. Shotwell Adjunct Professor of History
A.B., Toronto, 1898; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903.
George W. Botsford Adjunct Professor of History
A.B., Nebraska, 1884; A.M., 1889, Ph.D., Cornell, 1891.
Albert P. Wills Adjunct Professor of Mechanics
B.E.E., Tufts, 1894; Ph.D., Clark, 1897.
Robert Sessions Woodworth Adjunct Professor of Psychology
A.B., Amherst, 1891; A.B., Harvard, 1896; A.M., 1897; Ph.D., Columbia, 1899.
Bern B. Gallaudet Adjunct Professor of Anatomy and
Clinical Lecturer and Instructor in Surgery
A.B., Trinity, 1880; A.M., 1883; M.D., Columbia, 1884.
Samuel A. Tucker Adjunct Professor of Electro-Chemistry
Ph.B., Columbia, 1895.
Henry Bedinger Mitchell Adjunct Professor of Mathematics
E.E., Columbia, 1898; A.M., 1900.
Vladimir G. Simkhovitch. . . .Adjunct Professor of Economic History
Ph.D., Halle-Wittenberg, 1898.
Edward Thomas Devine Schiff Professor of Social Economy
B.A., Cornell College, Iowa, 1887; M.A., 1890; LL.D. 1904; Ph.D., Pennsyl-
vania, 1895.
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION 9
Hermon C. Bumpus Director of the American Museum of
Natural History
B.A.. Brown, 1884; Ph.D., Clark, 1890.
Charles F. McKim . . . : Director of Atelier
Litt.D., Columbia, 1904.
Thomas Hastings Director of Atelier
Diplome' de I' £cole des Beaux-Arts, 1SS4.
Frank W. Tackson Professor of Clinical Medicine
A.B., Yale, 1876; M.D., Columbia, 1879.
Adolph Black Adjunct Professor of Civil Engineering
C.E., Columbia, 1894.
John Henry Larkin. . . .Adjunct Professor of Pathological Anatomy
A.B., Manhattan, 1891; M.D., Columbia, 1894.
Charles Edward Lucre .Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Engineering
B.S., College of the City of New York, 1895; M.S., New York University, 1899;
Ph.D., Columbia, 1902.
Edward Kasner Adjunct Professor of Mathematics
B.S., College of the City of New York, 1896; A.M., Columbia, 1897; Ph.D., 1899,
Curtis Hidden Page Adjunct Professor of the Romance
Languages and Literatures
A.B., Harvard, 1890; A.M., 1891; Ph.D., 1894.
Ashley Horace Thorndike Professor of English
A.B., Wesleyan, 1893; A.M., Harvard, 1896; Ph.D., 1898.
Walter Rautenstrauch Adjunct Professor of Mechanical
Engineering
B.S., University of Missouri, 1902; M.S., University of Maine, 1903.
Henry Johnson Professor of History in Teachers College
B.L., University of Minnesota, 1889; A.M., Columbia, 1902.
David Samuel Snedden Adjunct Professor of Educational
Administration in Teachers College
A.B., St. Vincent's College, 1890; A.B., Leland Stanford Junior University.
1897; A.M., Columbia, 1901; Ph.D., 1907.
Mary Adelaide Nutting Professor of Domestic Administration
in Teachers College
Edward R. Smith Reference Librarian, Avery Architectural
Library
A.B., Amherst, 1876.
Frederick Dielman President of the National Academy
of Design
Sir Caspar Purdon Clarke Director of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art
Edward Robinson Assistant Director of the Metro-
politan Museum of Art
A.B. Harvard, 1879; LL.D., University of Aberdeen, 1905.
Anton Vorisek Professor of Analytical Chemistry
in the College of Pharmacy
Phar.G., New York College of Pharmacy, 1898; Phar.D., 1902.
Frederick Arthur Goetze Dean of the Faculty of Applied
Science and Consulting Engineer
lf.Sc., Columbia, 1905.
Frederick Peterson Professor of Psvchiatry
M.D., Buffalo, 1879; Ph.D., Niagara, 1893-
io OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
James D. Voorhees Adjunct Professor of Obstetrics
A.B., Princeton, 1890; A.M., 1893; M.D., Columbia, 1893.
Royal Whitman Adjunct Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery
M.D., Harvard, 1882.
Pearce Bailey Adjunct Professor of Neurology
A.B., Princeton, 1886; A.M., 1889; M.D., Columbia, 1889.
George R. Lockwood Adjunct Professor of Clinical Medicine
A.B., College of the City of New York, 1881; M.D., Columbia, 1884.
William K. Draper Adjunct Professor of Clinical Medicine
A.B., Harvard, 1885; M.D., Columbia, 1888.
Van Horne Norrie Adjunct Professor of Clinical Medicine
A.B., Columbia, 1885; M.D., 1889.
Daniel Jordan Adjunct Professor of the Romance
Languages and Literatures
B.S., University of France, 1888; Pd.B., University of the State of New York,
1893-
Arthur F. J. Remy Adjunct Professor of Germanic Philology
A.B., College of the City of New York, 1890; A.M., Columbia, 1897; Ph.D., 1901 .
William Campbell Adjunct Professor of Metallography
B.S., Durham College of Science, 1898; Sc.D., 1905; M.Sc, Royal School of
Mines, 1903; Ph.D., Columbia, 1903; A.M., 1905.
William Pepperrell Montague Adjunct Professor of
Philosophv
A.B., Harvard, 1896; A.M., 1897; Ph.D., 1898.
William W. Lawrence Adjunct Professor of English
A.B., Bowdoin College, 1898; A.M., Harvard, 1900; Ph.D., 1903.
James Howard McGregor Adjunct Professor of Zoology
B.S., Ohio State, 1894; A.M., Columbia, 1896; Ph.D., 1899.
George Philip Krapp Adjunct Professor of English
A.B., Wittenberg College, 1894; A.M., 1897; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1899.
Charles A. Beard Adjunct Professor of Politics
Ph.B., De Pauw University, 1898; A.M., Columbia, 1903; Ph.D., 1904
Dickinson S. Miller Professor of Philosophy
A.B. and A.M., Harvard, 1892; Ph.D., Halle, 1893.
Grace A. Hubbard Adjunct Professor of English in Barnard
College
A.B., Smith, 1887; A.M., Cornell, 1893.
Nathan Abbott Professor of Law
A.B., Yale, 1877; LL.B., Boston University, 1893.
Simon Baruch Professor of Hydrotherapy
M.D., University of Virginia, 1862.
Harry A. Cushing Professor of Law
A.B., Amherst, 1891; A.M., Columbia, 1894; Ph.D., 1896; LL.B., 1901.
Arthur Twining Hadley, LL.D. .. .Theodore Roosevelt Professor
of American History and Institutions in the
University of Berlin for the year 1907-0S
President of Yale University.
K. G. Rudolf Leonhard, J.U.D Kaiser Wilhelm Professor of
German History and Institutions
for the year 1907-08
Professor of Legal Science in the University of Breslau.
OFFICERS OF 1 NS TR I 'CTION 1 1
Samuel McCune Lindsay Professor of Social Legislation
Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1889; Ph.D., Halle, 1892.
William Mansfield, Phar.D Acting Professor of Pharmacognosy
in the College of Pharmacy
Mrs. Mary K. Simkhovitch Adjunct Professor of Social
Economy in Barnard College
B.A., Boston University, 1890.
George D. Strayer Adjunct Professor of Elementary Education
in Teachers College
A.B., Johns Hopkins, 1903; Ph.D., Columbia, 1905.
Henry Suzzallo Adjunct Professor of Elementary Education
in Teachers College
A.B.. Stanford, 1899; A.M., Columbia, 1902; Ph.D., 1905.
Mabel F. Weeks. . . .Adjunct Professor of English in Barnard College
A.B.. Radcliffe, 1894.
Clinton B. Knapp Professor of Bacteriology in the College of
Pharmacy
M.D., Columbia, 1902
Hermann von W. Schulte Adjunct Professor of Anatomy
A.B., Trinity, 1897; M.D., Columbia, 1902
Richard C. Maclaurin Professor of Mathematical Physics
M.A., Auckland University College ; LL. M., Cambridge University, ; LL.D.,
(221)
Special Lecturers for 1907-08
John C. Gray, A.B., LL.B., LL.D Lecturer on the Carpentier
Foundation
Jeremiah W. Jenks, Ph.D., LL.D Lecturer on the George
Blumenthal Foundation
Samuel W. McCall, A.B Lecturer on the George Blumenthal
Foundation
(3)
Clinical Professors and Lecturers
Francis P. Kinnicutt Professor of Clinical Medicine
A.B., Harvard, 1868; A.M., 1872; M.D., Columbia, 1871.
Frank Hartley Professor of Clinical Surgery and Instructor
in Operative Surgery
A.B., Princeton, 1877; M.D., Columbia, 1880.
» Francis H. Markoe Professor of Clinical Surgery
A.B., Princeton, 1876; M.D., Columbia, 1S79.
John S. Thacher Professor of Clinical Medicine
A.B., Yale, 1877; M.D., Columbia, 1880.
Walter F. Chappell Clinical Professor of Laryngology
M.D., University of Toronto. 1879.
Andrew J. McCosh Professor of Clinical Surgery
A.B., Princeton, 1877; A.M., 1880; M.D., Columbia, 1880; LL.D., 1904.
Porter F. Chambers Clinical Professor of Gynecology
M.D., Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1876.
1 Died September 13, 1907
12 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
Francis Huber Professor of Clinical Medicine
B.S., College of the City of New York, 1873; M,D., College of Physicians and
Surgeons. 1877
Charles T. Poore Clinical Lecturer in Surgery
M.D., Columbia, 1866; A.M., Williams, 1891.
Robert Abbe Clinical Lecturer in Surgery
A.B., College of the City of New York, 1870; M.D.. Columbia, 1874.
William B. Coley Clinical Lecturer in Surgery
■ A.B., Yale, 1884; M.D., Harvard, 1888.
Lucius W. Hotchkiss. . . .Clinical Lecturer and Instructor in Surgery
A.B., Columbia, 1881; M.D., 1884.
John B. Walker Clinical Lecturer and Instructor in Surgery
A.B., Harvard, 1884; M.D., 1888.
Frank R. Oastler. . .Clinical Lecturer and Instructor in Gynecology
A.B., Yale. 1891; M.D., Columbia, 1894.
(13)
Instructors
Note — For the Instructors and other Officers not of Professorial Grade in Teachers
College, in the College of Pharmacy, and in the Summer Session, see the Table of
Contents.
Charles A. Harriman Instructor in Architecture
Edward Leaming, M.D Instructor in Photography
Robert Lewis, Jr., M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in Otology
Charles Prentice Benns, M.E Instructor in Shop-Work in
Teachers College
Charles North Dowd, M.D Instructor in Surgery
George Montague Swift, M.D Instructor in Medicine
Richard Frothingham, M.D Instructor in Laryngology
Charles Conrad Sleffel. .Instructor in Forging in Teachers College
Charles W. Weick, B.S Instructor in Wood-working and
Pattern-making in Teachers College
Walton Martin, M.D Instructor in Surgery
Albert E. Sumner, M.D Instructor in Physical Diagnosis
E. Milton Foote, M.D Instructor in Surgery
Alfred S. Taylor, M.D. .Assistant Instructor in Operative Surgery
Edward Lawrence Kurtz, E.M Instructor in Mining
Arthur M. Shrady, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Hydrotherapy
Richard H. Cunningham, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Electro-Physiology and in Neurology
Henry Woolfe Berg, M.D Instructor in Contagious Diseases
Linnaeus Edford La Fetra, M.D. . .Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
the Diseases of Children
Charles C. Trowbridge, M.S Instructor in Physics
Norman E. Ditman, M.D Instructor in Pathology
A. Emil Schmitt, M.D Assistant Instructor in Operative Surgery
Ward A. Holden, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Ophthalmology
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION 13
Frank S. Mathews, M.D Instructor in Gynecology
Howard C. Taylor, M.D Instructor in Gynecology
Henry H. Tyson, M.D Instructor in Ophthalmology
Forbes Hawkes, M.D Instructor in Surgery
Clarence A. McWilliams, M.D Instructor in Surgery
Adam M. Miller, A.M. . . .Instructor in Histology and Embryology
Adrian Van Sinderen Lambert, M.D Instructor in Surgery
Carleton P. Flint, M.D Instructor in Surgery
Eugene Hillhouse Pool, M.D Instructor in Surgery
Oliver S. Strong, Ph.D Instructor in Histology and Em-
bryology
Alfred Newton Richards, Ph.D Instructor in Pharmacology
Marie Reimer, Ph.D Instructor in Chemistry in Barnard College
Augustus B. Wadsworth, M.D Instructor in Bacteriology
James C. Ayer, M.D Instructor in Surgery and Assistant
Instructor in Operative Surgery
George Sloan Dixon, M.D Instructor in Otology
T. Stuart Hart, M.D Instructor in Physical Diagnosis
William P. Healy, M.D Instructor in Gynecology
John Howland, M.D Instructor in Contagious Diseases
James A. Miller, M.D Instructor in Physical Diagnosis
Charles J. Proben, M.D Instructor in Gynecology
George H. Ryder, M.D Instructor in Gynecology
William Skarstrom, M.D Instructor in Physical Education
Samuel W. Thurber, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Laryngology
Percy R. Turnure, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Surgery
Henry Bargy, A.M Instructor in the Romance Languages and
Literatures
George H. Ling, Ph.D Instructor in Mathematics
Nathaniel B. Potter, M.D Instructor in Medicine
Fred. P. Solley, M.D Instructor in Medicine
1 George Braxton Pegram, Ph.D Instructor in Physics
Gertrude M. Hirst, Ph.D Instructor in Classical Philology
in Barnard College
Walter A. Bastedo, M.D Instructor in Materia Medica and
Pharmacology and Assistant in Applied Therapeutics
William Cogswell Clarke, M.D Instructor in Surgery
Walter R. Crane, Ph.D Instructor in Mining
John W. Draper Maury, M.D. . .Instructor in Experimental Surgery
Edward Livingston Hunt, M.D Instructor in Neurology
Rowland Cox, M.D Assistant Instructor in Operative Surgery
James H. Kenyon, M.D. . . .Assistant Instructor in Operative Surgery
Charles P. Warren, A.M Instructor in Architecture
1 Absent on leave
14 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
Carlton Clarence Curtis, Ph.D Instructor in Botany
S. Alfred Mitchell, Ph.D Instructor in Astronomy
Wilhelm Alfred Braun, Ph.D Instructor in the Germanic
Languages and Literatures
Henry S. Patterson, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Materia Medica and Therapeutics
William R. Williams, M.D Instructor in Materia Medica and
Therapeutics
Morton Arendt, E.E Instructor in Electrical Engineering
Nellis B. Foster, M.D. .. .Instructor in Biological Chemistry and
Assistant in Applied Therapeutics
Lewis F. Frissell, M.D Instructor in Physical Diagnosis
Walter S. Reynolds, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Genito-Urinary Diseases
Linsly Rudd Williams, A.M., M.D. . . .Chief of Clinic and Instructor
in Medicine
Charles H. Jaeger, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Orthopaedic Surgery
John Driscoll Fitz-Gerald, II, Ph.D.,. . . .Instructor in the Romance
Languages and Literatures
Victor J. Chambers, Ph.D Instructor in Organic Chemistry
Everett J. Hall Instructor in Assaying
Tracy Elliot Hazen, Ph.D Instructor in Botany
Bergen Davis, Ph.D Instructor in Physics
Charles P. Berkey, Ph.D Instructor in Geology
Floyd J. Metzger, Ph.D Instructor in Analytical Chemistry
Karl M. Vogel, M.D Instructor in Pathology
Howard D. Collins, M.D Instructor in Surgery
George H. McFarland, Jr., M.D Instructor in Obstetrics
Raymond C. Osburn, Ph.D Instructor in Zoology
Harry L. Parr, A.B., Mech.E Instructor in Mechanical
Engineering
T. Laurance Saunders, M.D Instructor in Otology
Harmon Smith, M.D Instructor in Clinical Laryngology
(85)
Demonstrators
Henry E. Hale, M.D Demonstrator of Anatomy
Haven Emerson, M.D Demonstrator of Physiology and
Assistant in Medicine
William Darrach, M.D Demonstrator of Anatomy and
Instructor in Surgery
Leander H. Shearer, M.D Demonstrator of Physiology
and Assistant in Medicine
Arthur Walker Bingham, A.B., M.D Demonstrator of
Physiology
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION 15
Charles Russell Lowell Putnam, M.D . . .Demonstrator of Anatomy
Harry M. Keator, M.D Demonstrator of Physiology
Horst Oertel, M.D Demonstrator in Pathological Anatomy
Frederick T. Van Beuren, Jr., M.D Demonstrator of Anatomy
and Assistant in Surgery
Joseph Grant Yocum. M.D Demonstrator of Physiology
Theordore J. Abbott, M.D Demonstrator of Physiology
Eugene L. Opie.M.D Demonstrator of Pathological Anatomy
(12)
Tutors
Samuel Osgood Miller, C.E Tutor in Drawing
Cavalier Hargrave Jouet, Ph.D. . . .Tutor in Analytical Chemistry
David Bovaird, M.D Tutor in Medicine
Evan M. Evans, M.D Tutor in Medicine
Edmund L. Dow, M.D Tutor in Medicine
Thomas H. Harrington, C.E Tutor in Drawing
Arthur Colon Neish, Ph.D Tutor in Chemistry
» Virginia C. Gildersleeve, A.M Tutor in English in Barnard
College
Charles H. Ellard, A.M Tutor in Analytical Chemistry
Hal T. Beans, Ph.D Tutor in Analytical Chemistry
Roscoe Guernsey, Ph.D Tutor in Greek
Henri F. Muller, B. es L. . . .Tutor in the Romance Languages and
Literatures
Eleanor Keller, A.B Tutor in Chemistry in Barnard College
Frank S. Meara, M.D Tutor in the Diseases of Children
Maurice A. Lamme, B.S Tutor in Mineralogy
Frederick W. J. Heuser, A.M Tutor in the Germanic
Languages and Literatures
Arthur Ray Maxson, A.M Tutor in Mathematics
Edward F. Kern, B.S., Ph.D Tutor in Metallurgy
Ida Helen Ogilvie, Ph.D Tutor in Geology in Barnard College
Margaret A. Reed, A.B Tutor in Zoology in Barnard College
Alvan A. Tenney, Ph.D Tutor in Sociology
John G. Gill, Ph.D Tutor in the Romance Languages and
Literatures
T. Leslie Shear, Ph D Tutor in Classical Philology
Lewis P. Siceloff, A.B Tutor in Mathematics
Harold C. Brown, Ph.D Tutor in Philosophy
Pauline Hamilton Dederer, A.M. . . .Tutor in Zoology in Barnard
College
Alexander 0. Bechert, A.M Tutor in the Germanic Languages
and Literatures
Samuel R. Williams, Ph.D Tutor in Physics
1 Absent on leave
1 6 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
William X. Berg, Ph.D Tutor in Biological Chemistry
Marion E. Latham, A.M Tutor in Botany in Barnard College
Charles E. Morrison', C.E.. A.M Tutor in Civil Engineering
Otto Kress, B.S., A.M Tutor in Chemistry
Ernest S. Bates, A.M Tutor in English
Edgar S. Downs, Ph.D Tutor in Electrical Engineering
Edward J. Kunze, B.S., M.E Tutor in Mechanical Engineering
Allen W. Porterfield, A.M Tutor in the Germanic Languages
and Literatures
Edgar H. Sturtevant, Ph.D Tutor in Classical Philology
Kaufman G. Falk, Ph.D Tutor in Physics
William C. Krathwohl, A.B Tutor in Mathematics
(39)
Lecturers and other Special Officers of Instruction
Abraham Yohannan, Ph.D Lecturer in Oriental Languages
George James Bayles, Ph.D Lecturer in Ecclesiology
Alexis A. Julien, Ph.D Curator in Geology
Ernst D. Richard, Pd.D Lecturer on the History of German
Civilization
Charles Forbes, M.D Curator in Physics
Clark Wissler, Ph.D Lecturer in Anthropology
Adolph F. Bandelier Lecturer in American Archaeology
Berthold Laufer, Ph.D Lecturer in Chinese
John V. Van Pelt, Diplome E.D. B.-A Associate Director of
Atelier
William B. Parker. A.B Lecturer in English
Algernon De V. Tassin, A.M Lecturer in English
Myron Samuel Falk, Ph.D Lecturer in Civil Engineering
Wendell T. Bush, Ph.D Lecturer in Philosophy
Robert J. Lau, Ph.D Lecturer in Semitic Languages
William Adams Delano, A.B Associate Director of Atelier
Dino Bigongiari, A.B ... Lecturer in Latin and the Romance Lan-
guages and Literatures
Goldthwaite H. Dorr, A.B., LL.B Lecturer in Law
John L. Gerig, Ph. D .... Lecturer in the Romance Languages and
Literatures
William James, M.D., LL.D. . . .Non-resident Lecturer in Psychology
Francis A. Nelson, B.S. . Diplome' E.D. B.-A. Lecturer in Architecture
Allan F. Westcott, A.M Lecturer in English
Carlton Huntley Hayes, A.M Lecturer in History
William S. Day, Ph.D Lecturer in Physics
William K. Gregory, A.M Lecturer in Zo5logy
George W. Hartwell, A.M Lecturer in Mathematics
Maude A. Huttmann, A.M Lecturer in History in Barnard
College
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION 17
Eugene E. Agger, Ph.D Lecturer in Political Economy
Robert E. Chaddock, A.M Lecturer in Political Economy
Harold S. Davidson, Ph.D Gustav Gottheil Lecturer in
Semitic Languages
Arthur O. Lovejoy, A.M Lecturer in Philosophy
Thomas R. Powell, A.B., LL.B Lecturer in Public Law
Frederick H. Getman, Ph.D Lecturer in Physics
Herbert H. Woodrow, A.B Lecturer in Psychology
Harvey Wiley Corbett, B.S., Diplom6 E.D. B.-A Associate
(34) Director of Atelier
Assistants
Flora E. Harpham, A.M Computor at the Observatory
D. Stuart Dodge Jessup, M.D Assistant in Clinical Pathology
and in Medicine
Charles E. Banker, M.D Assistant in Histology
William C. Uhlig, Ph.D Assistant in Analytical Chemistry
Charles H. Smith, M.D. . . .Assistant in Histology and Embryology
William H. Welker B.S Assistant in Biological Chemistry
Hans Zinsser, A.M., M.D. . . .Assistant in Bacteriology and Hygiene
James S. Macgregor, M.S Assistant in Civil Engineering
Morris F. Weinrich, Mech. E., A.M Assistant in Drawing
Julian Blanchard, A.B Assistant in Physics
Hermon W. Farwell, A.M Assistant in Physics
Alice Haskell, A.B Assistant in English in Barnard College
James M. Kent, M.D Assistant in Applied Therapeutics
William R. May, M.D Assistant in Applied Therapeutics
Charles V. Morrill, Jr., A.M Assistant in Zoology
Leighton B. Morse, Ph.B Assistant in Physics
Cornelis Offerhaus, Ph.D Assistant in Metallurgy
Grace P. Reynolds, A.M. . .Assistant in Chemistry in Barnard College
Austen Fox Riggs, A.B., M.D Assistant in Medicine
J. Edwin Sinclair, B.S Assistant in Analytical Chemistry
Elizabeth I. Thompson, A.B Assistant in Botany in Barnard
College
Warner Brown, A.M Assistant in Psychology
Chester Arthur Darling, A.M Assistant in Botany
Adolphe Monell Sayre, A.B Assistant in English
Grace Langford, S.B Assistant in Physics in Barnard College
Peter Irving, M.D Assistant in Clinical Pathology
Henry Van V. Holcomb, M.D Assistant in Surgery
James I. Russell, M.D Assistant in Surgery
Alfred Carlyle Prentice, M.D Assistant in Surgery
Curtenis Gillette, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Isaac Ogden Woodruff, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Charles S. Fischer, Ph.D., M.D Assistant in Medicine
Malcolm Goodridge, M.D Assistant in the Diseases of Children
1 8 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
Harry L. Hollingsworth, A.B Assistant in Psychology
Charles Arthur Stewart, A.M Assistant in Mineralogy
Max Forrester Eastman, A.B Assistant in Philosophy
Edward Cussler, M.D Assistant in Clinical Pathology
David G. Allen, M.D Assistant in Bacteriology and Hygiene
M. Leroy Arnold, A.M Assistant in English
Frank C. Becker, A.B Assistant in Philosophy
William Blancard, M.D Assistant in Genito- Urinary Diseases
Bayard Boyesen, A.B Assistant in English
Francis S. Foote, Jr., E.M Assistant in Civil Engineering
Claude A. Frink, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Daniel Gorren, C.E Assistant in Civil Engineering
Victor R. Greiff, E.E Assistant in Electrical Engineering
Sidney V. Haas, M.D Assistant in the Diseases of Children
Edwin Kirk, A.B Assistant in Palaeontology
Charles F. Lawson, A.M Assistant in English
Robert H. McConnell, M.D. . .Assistant in the Diseases of Children
Howard H. Mason, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Harry Wilfred Reddick, A.M Assistant in Mathematics
Willard L. Severinghaus, A.M Assistant in Physics
Charles E. Taylor, B.S., A.M Assistant in Analytical Chemistry
John W. Taylor, A.M Assistant in English
Edward D. Thurston, Jr., A.B., Mech. E Assistant in Me-
chanical Engineering
Reinhard A. Wetzel, B.S Assistant in Physics
Herbert B. Wilcox, M.D Assistant in Clinical Pathology
Stanley F. Bond, E.E Assistant in Electrical Engineering
Elihu C. Church, C.E Assistant in Civil Engineering
William F. Cooley, M.S., B.D Assistant in Philosophy
James C. Greenway, M.D Assistant in Biological Chemistry
Eric Higgins, B.S Assistant in Physical Chemistry
Alfred Hoffman, Ph.D Assistant in Organic Chemistry
Charles A. Isaacs, A.B Assistant in Mathematics
Leo Kessel, M.D Assistant in Biological Chemistry
Charles B. Markham, A.M Assistant in Physics
Matthew Steel, M.S Assistant in Biological Chemistry
William Weinberger, M.D Assistant in Biological Chemistry
Edwin B. Wheeler, B.S Assistant in Physics
David D. Whitney, A.M Assistant in Zoology
(70
CLINICAL ASSISTANTS AT THE VANDERBILT CLINIC
Officers of instruction holding appointments in addition to that
of Clinical Assistant are not included in this list. A complete list
of the Clinical Assistants in each subject will be found at the head of
the appropriate Departmental Statement.
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION 19
In Medicine
Edward Cook, M.D. J. W. Dounce, M.D.
Herman Eichhorn, M.D. George E. Barnes, M.D.
Julius W. Weinstein, M.D. Stanmore L. Cash, M.D.
Gerald H. Grout, M.D.
In Surgery
Alfred Raabe, M.D. Noel B. Leggett, M.D.
Ransom S. Hooker, M.D.
In Orthopaedic Surgery
Sigmund Epstein, M.D. Irving Steinhardt, M.D.
Arthur Shoemaker, M.D.
In Neurology
Charles E. Atwood, M.D. E. J- McEntee, M.D.
S. P. Goodhardt, M.D. J. E. Clark, M.D.
L. P. Clark, M.D. J. L. Macumber, M.D.
H. R. Humphries, M.D. Charles D. Cleghorn, M.D.
Thomas P. Prout, M.D. Charles Rosenbeck, M.D.
G. W. Todd, M.D. Edward Scripture, M.D.
C. F. Haviland, M.D. Smith Ely Jelliffe, M.D. -
In Gynecology
William L. Bradley, M.D. Percy H. Williams, M.D.
Harold D. Meeker, M.D.
In Ophthalmology
John A. Jackson, M.D. Nathan Goodfriend, M.D.
David H. Levy, M.D. Alfred Braun, M.D.
Christopher J. Astle, M.D. Gerald H. Grout, M.D.
In Laryngology
(Including Diseases of the Larynx, Pharynx, and Nasal Passages)
A. P. Coll, M.D. C. D. Van Wagenen, M.D.
John Leshure, M.D. T. Joseph Barry, M.D.
F. Conger Smith, M.D. Charles Osgood, M.D.
Irving W. Voorhees, M.D.
In Otology
Matthew L. Carr, M.D. Alfred Michaelis, M.D.
Frank J. Blodgett, M.D.
In Dermatology
John H. P. Hodgson, M.D. Charles T. Dade, M.D.
John Aldrich, M.D. S. Dana Hubbard, M.D.
J. D. Gold, M.D. Shirley E. Sprague, M.D.
George Howard Fox, M.D.
20 OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
In Diseases of Children
Lewis M. Silver, M.D. Edward Miller, M.D.
Albert F. Brugman, M.D. M. H. Sicard, M.D.
A. B. Yard, M.D. Charles Herrman, M.D
Ira S. Wile, M.D. George Augustus Schnepel, M.D
In Geni to -Urinary Diseases
Walter B. Brouner, M.D. J. B. Stein, M.D.
S. W. Fowler, M.D. James Albert Cowan, M.D.
Charles C. De Klyn, M.D.
In Applied Therapeutics
F. G. Goodridge, M.D. Henry C. Becker, M.D.
Sigmund Epstein, M.D. Max Nisselson, M.D.
Max Schulman, M.D. David Kaliski, M.D.
Charles E. Webster, M.D.
In Obstetrics
Fellowes Davis, M.D. Ellice McDonald, M.D.
In Hydrotherapy
Albert J. Wittson, M.D.
(7 6)
in tlxc ©its of ^txo 'Sorfc
GENERAL STATEMENT
On October 31, 1754, Letters Patent were issued incorporating The
Governors of the College of the Province of New York in the
City of New York in America, and providing for the es- .
tablishment of a College to be known as Kings College
"for the Instruction and Education of Youth in the Learned Lan-
guages and in the Liberal Arts and Sciences." The conclusion of the
announcement issued in the same year reads: "A serious, virtuous,
and industrious Course of Life being first provided for, it is further the
Design of this College, to instruct and perfect the Youth in the learned
Languages, and in the Arts of Reasoning exactly, of Writing correctly,
and Speaking eloquently: And in the Arts of Numbering and Measur-
ing, of Surveying and Navigation, of Geography and History, of Hus-
bandry, Commerce, and Government; and in the Knowledge of all
Nature in the Heavens above us, and in the Air, Water, and Earth
around us, and the various Kinds of Meteors, Stones, Mines and
Minerals, Plants and Animals, and of every Thing useful for the Com-
fort, the Convenience, and Elegance of Life, in the chief Manufactures
relating to any of these things: And finally, to lead them from the
Study of Nature, to the Knowledge of themselves, and of the God of
Nature, and their Duty to Him, themselves, and one another; and
every Thing that can contribute to their true Happiness both here and
hereafter."
In 1784, the Legislature of the State of New York passed an act
incorporating the "Regents of the University of the State of
New York," vesting the property of Kings College in the Regents,
and changing the name of the College to Columbia College. In 1787,
this was repealed, and a statute passed confirming the Charter of 1754
for Columbia College, and specifying "that the style of the said
1 The attention of those interested in the historical development of the University
is called to The History of Columbia University 1754-1904 (pp. xiii + 403) published in
Commemoration of the One Hundred and Fiftieth Anniversary of the Founding of
Kings College, by the Columbia University Press through The Macmillan Co., New
York, and to various aritcles in the Columbia University Quarterly.
21
2 2 GENERAL ST A TEMEN T
corporation shall be, The Trustees of Columbia College in the City of
New York."
In 1810, the charter was again amended in certain particulars at the
request of the Trustees, and re-enacted, but the corporate title re-
mained and still continues unchanged. The title to all corporate prop-
erty is vested in a board of twenty-four Trustees, whose term of office
is for life, and who form a self-perpetuating body, exer-
cising the power of appointment as to all officers of in-
struction and administration and general oversight and control of
the affairs of the University.
In 1896, the Trustees approved the use of the title Columbia Uni-
versity in the City of New York, and in 1897 the work of the University
was begun at Morningside Heights.
The President has charge of the educational administration of the
University and is Chairman of the University Council and of every
faculty established by the Trustees. The principal administrative
officers, other than the President, are the Deans, who under the general
supervision of the President have immediate charge of the work of the
several faculties ; the Librarian, the Consulting Engineer, the Secre-
tary of the University, the Registrar, the Bursar, and the Superin-
tendent of Buildings and Grounds.
The University Council is a representative body consisting of the
President, and the Dean and one elected member from each of the
several faculties. Subject to the reserved power of control by
the Trustees, it is the function of the Council (a) to determine the
conditions upon which the degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of
Philosophy shall be conferred, and recommend candidates for these
degrees; (6) to secure the correlation of courses offered by the several
faculties with a view to increasing the efficiency and enlarging the
range of University work, encourage original research, and adjust all
questions involving more than one faculty; (c) to make recommenda-
tions, both to the Trustees and to the several faculties, concerning the
educational administration of the University, and advise the President
upon such matters as he may bring before it; (d) to appoint all Fellows
and University Scholars and, within the limits of the Statutes, make
rules for their government.
The University includes the following.
Columbia College (see p. 171) offers a program of studies, leading
to the degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science.
Emphasis is placed upon the quality of the student's work rather
than upon the time spent in residence, and this combined with the close
co-ordination of the work of the Summer Session with that
Schools and Q£ t^e College makes it possible for a well prepared candi-
date to complete the requirements for the bachelor's degree
in three and one-half years, three years, or conceivably in a shorter
GENERAL STATEMENT 23
period for students who by anticipating College work are able to enter
with advanced standing. The program provides not only for those
students who wish to devote their entire time to undergraduate work,
but for those who desire during their collegiate residence to prepare
themselves for advanced standing in some professional course of study.
As a preliminary to any of its professional courses the University
strongly recommends at least two years of collegiate work, and candi-
dates for the professional degrees who are not already college graduates
are advised to take advantage of the opportunities offered through
Columbia College for a combination of general and professional studies
which will lead to the bachelor's degree in arts or science, in addition
to a professional degree inlaw, medicine, applied science, teaching or
fine arts, in six years or in some cases in less time.
Barnard College (see p. 306), founded in 1889, is a separate
corporation. As an undergraduate college for women, however, it bears
the same relation to the educational system of Columbia University
as does Columbia College for men. The requirements for admission
and the standard of scholarship are of the same grade. The students
receive their instruction in the Barnard College buildings. The degree
of Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science is conferred upon its grad-
uates by the University on the recommendation of the Faculty of
Barnard College. (For the regulations governing candidates for an
academic degree and for a diploma in teaching, see p. 314.)
The other faculties of the University offer advanced courses of study
and investigation leading to appropriate degrees and certificates in
(a) law, (b) medicine, (c) philosophy, education, philology, and letters,
(d) history, economics and social science, and public law, (e) mathe-
matics and natural science, (/) applied science, (g) fine arts, and (h)
pharmacy. Women students are not admitted to the courses in law,
medicine, or applied science.
The division of the University into faculties and schools neither
controls nor limits the student in his freedom of electing, under one or
several of the faculties, courses that lead to the degrees of Master of
Arts and Doctor of Philosophy (see p. 164). Advanced courses and
opportunities for original research leading primarily to these degrees
are offered by:
The Faculty of Philosophy (see p. 253), in philosophy and educa-
tion, psychology and anthropology, classical philology, English,
comparative literature, and the Germanic, the Romance, and the
Oriental languages;
The Faculty of Political Science (see p. 249), in history and
political philosophy, economics and social science, and public law and
comparative jurisprudence;
The Faculty of Pure Science (see p. 256), in mathematics, astron-
omy, physics mathematical and experimental, chemistry, mineral-
ogy, geology, zoology, botany, physiology, anatomy, bacteriology,
24 GENERAL STATEMENT
embryology, and biological chemistry, and in mining, metallurgy, and
engineering (civil, electrical, mechanical, sanitary, and chemical).
The School of Law (seep. 193), established'in 1858, offers a course
of three years in the principles and practice of private and public law,
leading to the degree of Bachelor of Laws.
The College of Physicians and Surgeons (see p. 204), founded
in 1807, offers a course of four years in the principles and practice of
medicine and surgery, leading to the degree of Doctor of Medicine.
The School of Mines (see p. 222), founded in 1863, offers courses
of study in mining engineering and in metallurgy, each of four years,
leading to a professional degree.
The Schools of Engineering and Chemistry (see p. 222), setoff
from the School of Mines in 1896, offer courses of study, each of four
years, leading to an appropriate professional degree in chemistry and
chemical engineering and in civil, sanitary, electrical, and mechanical
engineering.
The Faculty of Fine Arts (see p. 287), founded in 1906 and having
jurisdiction over the following Schools: Architecture (founded as a de-
partment in 1880), Music (founded as a department in 1896), and
Design (1906), offers courses of study of indeterminate length leading
to appropriate degrees and certificates in Architecture and Music, and,
in co-operation with the National Academy of Design (an independent
corporation, see p. 297), to a certificate in Design.
Teachers College (see p. 324), founded in 1888 and chartered in
1889, was included in the University in 1898. It is a separate cor-
poration, but takes academic rank in the University system as a pro-
fessional school for teachers. It offers the following courses of study:
(a) graduate courses leading to the doctor's diploma or to the master's
diploma; (b) professional courses, each of two years, based upon two
years of collegiate study, leading to the bachelor's diploma for teachers
and supervisors in kindergartens or elementary schools, or for spe-
cialists in domestic art, domestic science, fine arts, manual training,
music, and physical education; and to the degree of Bachelor of
Science in Education.
The College of Pharmacy (see p. 354), is, similarly, a separate cor-
poration. It offers University courses leading to the degrees of
Pharmaceutical Chemist and Doctor of Pharmacy.
By agreement with Mr. Joseph Pulitzer of New York, executed July
20, 1903, Columbia University will establish in the future a School
of Journalism, for which purpose Mr. Pulitzer has given to the Uni-
versity the sum of one million dollars.
In co-operation with Yale University, courses are offered designed
to prepare students for work in foreign countries, either in the service
of the United States Government or otherwise. (See p. 251.)
GENERAL STATEMENT 25
The University maintains a Summer Session (see p. 363), of six
weeks' duration, in which are offered courses that are accepted in
partial fulfilment of the requirements of certain academic degrees
and of the diplomas in teaching.
Through its system of Extension Teaching (see p. 366), the Uni-
versity offers to men and women, especially to those engaged in teach-
ing, who can give only a portion of their time to study, an opportunity
to pursue subjects included in a liberal education and to make progress,
if they so desire, toward a diploma in teaching or an academic degree.
In order to present clearly a summary statement of the equipment
and the instruction offered in any given group of subjects by the entire
University, including Barnard College, Teachers College, _. . .
*' ° .. , Divisional
and the College of Pharmacy, and to unify and correlate organization
the work of the several departments, the departments
are grouped together in divisions, as follows:
Biology: Anatomy, Bacteriology, Botany, Physiology, Embryology,
Biological Chemistry, and Zoology.
Chemistry: Chemistry and Physiological Chemistry.
Classical Philology: Greek and Latin.
Education (Faculty of Teachers College).
Engineering: Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical
Engineering, and Engineering Drafting.
Fine Arts (Faculty of Fine Arts) : Architecture, Comparative
Literature, Fine Arts, and Music.
Geology, Geography, and Mineralogy: Geology, Geography,
and Mineralogy.
History, Economics, and Public Law (Faculty of Political
Science) : Economics, Social Economy, Sociology and Statistics,
History, and Public Law and Jurisprudence.
Mathematical and Physical Science: Astronomy, Mathematics,
Mechanics, and Physics.
Medicine (College of Physicians and Surgeons).
Mining and Metallurgy: Metallurgy and Mining.
Modern Languages and Literatures: Comparative Literature,
English, Celtic, Germanic Languages, and Romance Languages.
Oriental Languages: Chinese, Indo-Iranian Languages, and
Semitic Languages.
Pharmacy (College of Pharmacy).
Philosophy, Psychology, and Anthropology: Anthropology,
Philosophy, and Psychology.
Physical Education: Physical Education.
Private Law (Faculty of Law).
The Announcements of each College or School, of the Summer
26 REGISTRATION
Announce- Session, of Extension Teaching, and of the several Divi-
ments sions, are issued annually or biennially in the form of Bul-
letins of Information, and may be obtained without charge from the
Secretary of the University.
GENERAL REGULATIONS
Academic Discipline
Under the statutes of the University every student is admitted
subject to the disciplinary powers of the University authorities. The
President is empowered to administer discipline and to authorize the
Deans of the several faculties to do so on his behalf.
Attendance
No degrees are granted by the University for work done in absentia,
and a minimum residence of one complete academic year (or in the
case of the degree of Master of Arts attendance at four Summer
Sessions or two Summer Sessions and one half-year) is required of
each candidate for a degree.
The University requires of all students regular attendance upon all
stated academic exercises.1
REGISTRATION
A student may enter Columbia University as either (i) a matricu-
lated student, accepted by the University as having fulfilled the
preliminary qualifications for candidacy for a degree or diploma
in teaching; or (2) a non-matriculated student, permitted to attend
such courses as he may be qualified to take, but not regarded as a
candidate for a degree or diploma in teaching. Non-matriculated
students may, however, receive a formal statement as to the satisfac-
tory completion of any course or courses. In the Announcement of
each faculty will be found the conditions governing the admission
of either matriculated or non-matriculated students to courses under
that faculty.
Before attending any University exercises each student must regis-
ter, i. e., must present himself in person to furnish the information
necessary for the University records and to file a statement of the
courses be is authorized to pursue (for the matriculation or registra-
tion fee, payable but once, see p. 27). The usual time for regis-
tration is at the beginning of the academic year. The central office of
the Registrar, 201 East Hall, and the offices at the College of Physicians
and Surgeons, 437 West 59th Street, at the College of Pharmacy,
115 West 68th Street, and at Barnard College and Teachers College,
1 Students prevented by conscientious scruples from complying with academic
requirements which may be fulfilled only upon days set apart by their church for
religious observance, should make application to the appropriate University authority
for equitable relief.
FEES 27
will be open for registration on January 31, 1908, from September
16 to September 22, 1908, and on January 30, 1909. New students
may also register on the day following each of these periods.
Students registering later must pay an additional fee of S5.00.
They may, however, if unable through no fault of their own to com-
plete their registration, file a provisional statement within the statu-
tory period. Credit for attendance will date from the first day of each
half-year, and students will be held directly accountable for absences
incurred owing to late registration. In order to qualify for the receipt
of their stipends, Fellows and Scholars must report themselves as in
residence to the Registrar upon the first day of each half-year.
The requirements for the several degrees, certificates, and diplomas
in teaching may be completed at any time during the year, but
diplomas are issued only at commencement and at the beginning of
the first and of the second half-year.
Withdrawal
An honorable discharge will always be granted to any student in
good standing who may desire to withdraw from the University; but
no student under the age of twenty-one years will be entitled to a
discharge without submitting the written assent of his parent or
guardian.
Students are requested, in case of withdrawal from the University
during the academic year, to notify the Registrar in writing without
delay. No application for a return of fees can be considered unless
such notice be given at the time of withdrawal.
The Dean of any faculty may for reasons of weight grant a leave
of absence to a student in good standing.
FEES
The regulations of the corporation of Columbia College in the City
of New York in regard to fees are as follows. The President is under
instructions to withdraw the privileges of any student delinquent in
payment after the second Wednesday of each half-year. All regula-
tions as to fees are subject to change by the Trustees at their discretion.
For ^Matriculation or Registration : Required of all students
before entrance, payable but once $ 5
For late Registration (see page 27) 5
For Tuition, payable at the beginning of each half-year ; if the
entire fee be less than $100 the whole must be paid upon
registration.
For matriculated students:
In the College, per point (seepage 175) 5
To be paid for the total number of points for which the
student is permitted to register; with extra charges for cer-
28 FEES
tain allowed professional courses, not to exceed $100 in
any year.
In the School of Law per annum $ 150
In the College of Physicians and Surgeons. ..." " 250
In the Schools of Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry
(exclusive of certain summer course fees, see page
29) per annum 250
In the Schools of Fine Arts " " 150-200
In Architecture the fees are at the rate of $15 per annum
for each hour of attendance a week on lectures, with
special fees for drawing and design up to a total
maximum of $200.
Candidates for the degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of
Philosophy, exclusive of laboratory fees (see page
29) per annum 150
With a maximum fee — for courses actually needed to
fulfil the requirements of the degree in question — of $1 50
and $300,* respectively, when the course does not exceed
for the master's degree, three, and for the doctor's de-
gree, five years.
For non-matriculated students (and matriculated students
taking part time), at the rate of $15 per annum for each
hour of attendance a week on lectures or recitations, with
a maximum fee of $150 except that in Columbia College
the charge is the same as for matriculated students and
in the Schools of Pure Science and Fine Arts the maximum
fee is $200, and that in the schools of Medicine, Mines,
Engineering, and Chemistry, the rate is $25 per annum
for each hour, with a maximum fee of $250. For other fees
See page 2 9.
For all students, matriculated or non-matriculated, in the
Summer Session 3°
For Students in Extension Teaching, see page 368.
For Examinations, payable in each case before examination is
held :
For entrance (see pp. 154 et seq.) 5
For any examination or single series of examinations
taken at any other time than at the conclusion of a
course actually attended 5
For the Collegiate degree of Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor
of Science 15
For any professional or technical degree 25
1 Tuition fees paid by a candidate for A.M. will be credited toward the maximum
fee for Ph.D. provided there be no change in the choice of major and minor subjects.
FEES 29
For the degree of Master of Arts $ 25
For the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 35
For Use of the Gymnasium:
Required of all students (men and women) except those
of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the
College of Pharmacy per annum 7
Gymnasium fee, Summer Session, optional 5
For the fees prescribed by the Trustees of Barnard College, Teachers
College, and the College of Pharmacy see the separately printed
Announcements.
Laboratory Fees
The Statutes provide that students registered in any department of
the University who are not candidates for a degree, as well as all candi-
dates for the higher degrees, shall be charged, in addition to the pre-
scribed tuition fee, a fee for certain laboratory courses and for the use
of laboratories, up to a maximum fee of $250 including tuition. The
schedule of such fees, which is now under revision, may be obtained
from the Registrar.
Medicine
The charges for non-candidates for a degree pursuing courses under
the Faculty of Medicine may be obtained from the Registrar or the
Assistant Registrar.
Architecture
Students not matriculated in architecture taking not less than four
hours per week of lectures are permitted to register and pay for periods
of two months at the rate of $5 per hour weekly of lectures taken.
They are charged a fee of $25 for the use of the drafting rooms for
the academic year, or $10 for a single period of two months, but in no
case are the total fees to exceed $50 for the twojmonths.
Summer Courses fcf Surveying
Laboratory fees, payable on or before the last Saturday in May,
are required as follows: Civil Engineering course No. 15, $25, or $7
per survey; No. 25 and No. 27, $15, or $5 per survey; No. 26, $5; No.
28 and No. 71, $10.
Non-candidates, candidates for admission to and students having
entered with advanced standing, who may be required to attend these
courses, and students required to repeat them through delinquency, are
charged, in addition, tuition fees as follows: No. 15, $35; No. 25. No.
27, No. 28, and No. 71, $25; No. 26, $10. In the case of a student
registered in Columbia College who has paid an additional fee under
the operation of this rule, an equitable credit will be made should he
later complete the requirements for a professional degree.
30 COMMITTEE ON EMPLOYMENT FOR STUDENTS
For further details as to the administration of these fees, see the
special Announcement of the Schools of Mines, Engineering, and
Chemistry.
Summer Courses in Mining and in Geodesy
Candidates for admission to advanced standing who attend the
Summer Course in Practical Mining are required to pay therefor a fee
of $50. All students attending the Summer Course in Geodesy must
pay a fee of $20 for the course, to the Bursar at the University. These
fees are payable on or before the last Saturday in May.
Deposits for Apparatus Supplies and for Keys to Desks and Lockers
A deposit for the use of lockers, keys, apparatus, material, and the
like, ranging from $2 to $40, is required of students in Mines, En-
gineering, Chemistry, and Architecture. At the end of the year each
student will be credited with those articles which he returns in good
order, and the value of those he has injured or broken will be deducted
from his deposit. Details may be obtained from the Bursar.
Residence Halls and University Commons
(See page 37)
Comparative Statement of Students' Probable Expenses for the
Academic Year, October to June
BASED ON STUDENTS* STATEMENTS
Matriculation Fee (First Year)
Tuition Fee'
Gymnasium Fee
Books
Incidentals
Residence Hall (39 weeks)
Commons (39 weeks)
Clothes and Washing
All other expenses
Total
Low Average Liberal
i°7
$ 5
$
5
$ 5
J5°
150
*5°
7
7
7
18
3°
40 up
7
15
33 '
100
128
180 "
ISO
191
236 '
46
80
125 '
24
57
100 '
$663
'6 up
COMMITTEE ON EMPLOYMENT FOR STUDENTS
Professor Kemp, Chairman; Professors Fiske, Huntington, Bur-
dick, Giddings, and Todd, and the Secretary, and Registrar of the
'For Medicine and Applied Science add $100, and for Architecture add $50. Stu-
dents in Applied Science should also make provision for deposits for apparatus ranging
from $10 to $40 and for Summer Courses.
APPOINTMENT COMMITTEES 3 1
University, and Secretary of Earl Hall. F. A. Dickey, A. B. 1907,
Secretary of the Committee.
It is the design of the Committee to aid students, especially those
coming from elsewhere than New York or the immediate vicinitv, to
earn enough for their partial or complete support, and if possible to
extend assistance to them in other ways. Many opportunities may
be offered to competent students both during the academic year and
in vacation if the fact of their desire to obtain employment is made
known. Some of the openings available are: private tutoring, trans-
lating, teaching in evening schools, travelling companions, clerical
work, stenography, and paid social and political work. Communi-
cations should be addressed to the Committee.
The Committee hesitates to advise medical and engineering stu-
dents to undertake outside work of any kind during the academic year.
The demands of these courses in lectures and laboratory work are so
exacting and inflexible as to make additional responsibilities a greater
burden than can, in the great majority of instances, be wisely assumed.
In general such students are advised to withdraw for a year in order
to earn the money necessary to enable them to give undivided attention
to their work while in residence.
In case of a choice of applicants for a position, preference is naturallv
given to those who have become personally known to members of this
Committee or to other officers. No prospective student should come
to the University depending entirely or even largely upon the assistance
of the Committee, but should be prepared to meet at least the expenses
of the first half-year — say two hundred and fifty dollars.
The heads of clinics in the Medical School have consented to give
advice without charge to students who are on the lists of the Com'
mittee, and who present cards of introduction from its Secretary.
Such visitors are received, as a general rule, during office hours at
private offices.
APPOINTMENT COMMITTEES
The duty of these Committees is to assist competent graduates of
the University to obtain suitable permanent academic emplovmsnt.
The Committees keep classified lists of those who wish employment
and will be glad to be informed promptly of present or prospective
vacancies in positions for which college -trained men or women are
eligible.
No fees are charged for any service rendered by either Committee.
For positions in Colleges and Universities except in the Department of Education
Dr. James Hulme Canfield, Librarian of the University, Chairman;
Professors Seligman, Cattell, Todd, Kirchwey, Carpenter (G. R.),
Wheeler, and Thomas.
Communications in regard to vacancies and recommendations of
2,2 PRIVILEGES IN OTHER INSTITUTIONS
suitable candidates for the same should be addressed to the Chairman,
Library, Columbia University, New York.
For college and university positions in Education, and for Administrative, Supervisory,
and Teaching positions in Normal, Secondary, and Elementary Schools and Kinder-
gartens
Professor James E. Russell, Dean of Teachers College, Chairman;
Professors Dutton, Kemp, McMurry, Smith (D. E.), and Trent.
Communications should be addressed to the Chairman of the Com-
mittee, or to its Secretary, Miss I. L. Pratt, Teachers College, Colum-
bia University, New York.
FELLOWSHIPS, SCHOLARSHIPS, AND PRIZES
(See Table of Contents)
RELATIONS BETWEEN THE UNIVERSITY AND OTHER
INSTITUTIONS
The educational opportunities of students in Columbia University
(including Barnard College, Teachers College, and the New York
College of Pharmacy) are increased by the close relations of the
University with other institutions of instruction and research.
The Theodore Roosevelt and Kaiser Wilhelm Professorships.
The Theodore Roosevelt Professorship of American History and
Institutions in the University of Berlin has been endowed by the gift
of $50,000 to the Trustees of Columbia University. Incumbents
of the professorship are appointed with the sanction of the German
Emperor by the Prussian Ministry of Education upon the nomination
of Columbia University. The term of office of each incumbent will
be one year and he will give instruction in the German language.
Incumbents of the chair will be so chosen that in successive years the
fields of American history, American constitutional and administrative
law, American economic and sociological problems and movements,
American education, and American contributions to science, tech-
nology, the arts and literature, will be the subject of instruction. The
instruction will be given in the University of Berlin during each
winter semester, and may be repeated in whole or in part at some
one of the other German universities during the ensuing summer
semester. Nominations will not be confined to the members of the
staff of Columbia University, but professors in any American institu-
tion of learning, or scholars unattached to any University, will be
eligible for nomination.
The Prussian Ministry of Education has established in Columbia
University a chair of German History and Institutions, to be filled
each year by the Trustees of Columbia University upon the nomination
of the Prussian Ministry of Education. To this chair the name oLthe
PRIVILEGES IN OTHER INSTITUTIONS 33
Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship of German History and Institutions has
been given, with the approval of the German Emperor.
Theodore Roosevelt Professorship
1906-07 John William Burgess, Ph.D., LL.D.
Ruggles Professor of Political Science and Constitutional
Law, and Dean of the Faculty of Political Science in
Columbia University.
1907-0S Arthur Twining Hadley, Ph.D., LL.D. President of Yale Uni-
versity.
190S-09 Felix Adler, Ph.D.
Professor of Social and Political Ethics in Columbia
University.
Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship
1906-07 Hermann Schumacher, Jur.D.
Professor of Political Economy in the University of Bonn.
1907-0S K. G. Rudolf Leonhard, J.U.D.
Professor of Legal Science in the University of Breslau.
American Museum of Natural History
The American Museum of Natural History places its collection at the
service of advanced students of Columbia University for the purposes
of study and research, and provides them with the necessary facilities
for work. The Director of the Museum is a member of the Faculty of
Pure Science of the University.
National Academy of Design
The agreement of February 5, 1906, between the University and the
Academy makes provision for the closest relations between the two
institutions and for the development of the study of design in New
York City. (See page 297.) The President of the Academy is now a
member of the Faculty of Fine Arts, and the professors in the new
departments of painting, sculpture, and in the decorative arts are to
be appointed, as financial provision for the chairs is made, upon the
joint recommendation of the President of the University and the
Council of the Academy.
Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art admits students of Columbia
University on presentation of cards of introduction from the
34 PRIVILEGES IN OTHER INSTITUTIONS
University, and gives them special facilities for the study of the ob-
jects in the Museum. The Director and Assistant Director are mem-
bers of the Faculty of Fine Arts.
The New York Botanical Garden
Columbia University has the privilege of conducting university
courses in botany at the New York Botanical Garden and of using its
laboratories and floral material, and all courses of instruction given
there are open to officers and students of the University without
charge. For a description of the equipment of the Botanical Garden,
see the statement of the Department of Botany (page 53).
Theological Seminaries
The Union Theological Seminary and the General Theological
Seminary, both of which are represented in the University Council,
admit students of high standing in the University to certain lectures
in their regular or special courses without tuition fee. The privi-
leges of the Libraries of the Seminaries, for reference, are open to all
qualified students of the University. Reciprocal advantages are offered
by the University to students of the Seminaries who are qualified to
register as candidates for the higher degrees. The General Theological
Seminary offers a scholarship to graduates of Columbia College.
The University also enjoys reciprocal arrangements with the
other theological seminaries in the vicinity of New York — the Jew-
ish Theological Seminary (New York), Drew Theological Seminary
(Madison, N. J.), St. Joseph's Theological Seminary (Yonkers, N. Y.),
and the New Brunswick (N. J.) Theological Seminary.
Hospitals
Besides the Vanderbilt Clinic and the Sloane Maternity Hospital,
the general and special hospitals of New York afford most important
fields for clinical teaching. The College of Physicians and Surgeons
is strongly represented on the staff of these institutions, and regular
clinical instruction at hospitals is made a prominent feature of the
program. Admission is free to all matriculated students of the College
of Physicians and Surgeons.
Other Institutions
For the details of the work preparatory to public service offered by
Yale University and Columbia University in co-operation, see page 251.
The Director of the New York School of Philanthropy is a professor
in the University, and the same reciprocal advantages for students
exist as in the case of the Theological Seminaries.
There are the closest informal relations between the University
and the Hispanic Society of America, the Rockefeller Institute of
Medical Research, the New York Zoological Garden, the New York
Aquarium, and the laboratories at Wood's Hole and Cold Spring
Harbor. (For the Libraries of the city, see below.)
THE LIBRARY 35
PUBLIC LECTURES
The University conducts annually a single course of public lectures
at the Cooper Union (these are known as the Hewitt lectures), and
has made arrangements to conduct similar courses in alternate years
at the American Museum of Natural History (the Jesup lectures)
and at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Hewitt lecturer for
1007-0S is Professor Shepherd. During the year many public lec-
tures are also delivered at the University, several of the departments
of instruction presenting courses each year. Certain of these courses
are maintained by specific endowment: in particular, the Beer lectures
in political science, the Blumenthal lectures in politics, the Carpentier
lectures in law. A list of the lecturers upon these foundations will be
found on page 11. At the opening exercises at Morningside Heights
on the first day of the academic year, and at those of the Medical
School on the following day, there are academic addresses, and begin-
ning in 1907-08 there will be a series of weekly lectures upon Science,
Philosophy, and Art by representative members of the several depart-
ments of instruction. Other lectures for 1907-08 include a series on
Spanish Literature, under the auspices of the Hispanic Society of
America, by James FitzMaurice- Kelly, lectures under the auspices of
the Germanistic Society of America, and a series on Navigation and
Nautical Science, given 'in co-operation with officers of the United
States Navy and the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. In-
formation as to all public lectures under the auspices of the Uni-
versity will be furnished by the Secretary.
THE LIBRARY
James H. Canfield Librarian
Charles A. Nelson Head Reference Librarian
and Editor of Library Publications
Edward R. Smith Reference Librarian, Avery Library
Mary Otis Cox Reference Librarian, Law Library
Vladimir Gr. Simkhovitch Bibliographer
Margaret Van Zandt Supervisor, Order Department
Harriet B. Prescott Supervisor, Catalogue Department
Frederic W. Erb. . . .Supervisor, Loan Division, Readers' Department
Frank C. Erb Supervisor, Shelf Department
The Library is open each week-day (except Thanksgiving, Christ-
mas, Good Friday, and Independence Day) from 8.30 a.m. until n
p.m., October-June; and until 10 p.m., July-September. All officers,
students, and graduates of the University have free access to the
Library and may draw books for home use.
Officers of the New York University, of the College of the City of
New York, of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and of the American
36 THE LIBRARY
Museum of Natural History are granted the same Library privileges
as are extended to graduates of Columbia University.
Persons of mature years desiring to engage in definite research
which cannot be successfully conducted in the public or other libraries
of this city will be given the privilege of using this Library in the
building, upon filing a satisfactory application, responsibly endorsed.
Blank applications will be furnished by the Librarian on request.
About 10,000 carefully selected reference books and the most im-
portant works on all subjects, in standard editions, representing the
leading authors in all literatures, are placed in the general reading-
room, directly accessible to all readers.
For the convenience of undergraduates of Columbia College, there
has been established in Hamilton Hall a College Study. Five thou-
sand carefully selected volumes have been placed in this room, as a
reference library.
Connected with the stacks in which are stored the books relating
especially to Philosophy, Literature, the Languages, the Sociologic
and Economic Sciences, Public Law, and History, are twenty special
study rooms, open only to authorized readers; thus affording advanced
students and investigators in these fields the fullest opportunity to
carry on their work in quiet rooms in the immediate vicinity of the
literature of the subjects under consideration. The various Science
departments have special libraries in close connection with their
laboratories and lecture rooms. A reference library of 4000 volumes
has been placed in Hamilton Hall, for the special use of students in
Columbia College.
The Library contains about 390,000 volumes, exclusive of unbound
pamphlets and duplicates, and some 30,000 German dissertations.
Among the notable special collections may be mentioned the Co-
lumbiana, 2000 titles; the Phoenix Library, consisting of 7000 vol-
umes, the gift of Stephen Whitney Phoenix, of the Class of 1859; the
Avery Architectural Library, a collection of about 17,000 volumes
relating to architecture and decorative art; the Mary Queen of Scots
Library, containing 550 volumes, collected and given by General
J. Watts de Peyster; the collection of over 1200 volumes by and
about Goethe; the Immanuel Kant collection of nearly 1000 volumes;
the valuable Townsend Library of National, State, and Individual
War Records; the Garden Library, deposited by the Southern Society
of New York; the valuable library of The Holland Society of New
York, 600 volumes, including the remarkable collection of works of
Grotius; and the Library of the American Mathematical Society, 1200
volumes. The Library is also the depository for the American Asso-
ciation for the Advancement of Science, and for the Reform Club of
the City of New York.
During the academic year which has just closed, the Library of the
University has received two more than usually valuable gifts: the
RESIDENCE HALLS 37
philological library of Professor Mortimer Lamson Earle, given by
his students and friends — consisting of some 2500 volumes, and the
library of Henry Livingston Thomas, late Chief Translator of the
Department of State, Washington, given by his son, Dr. William S.
Thomas — some 9000 volumes.
The entire Library is carefully and accurately catalogued both by
authors and subjects. The catalogue is on cards accessible to readers.
The Bryson Library of Teachers College, the Educational Library
of the University, and the carefully selected reference libraries of
Barnard College, the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and the
College of Pharmacy are all available to officers and students of the
University. Nearly all of the more private or restricted libraries of
the city, for example those of the learned societies, are open to offi-
cers and to advanced students introduced by the Librarian of the
University.
University Press Bookstore
A University Bookstore is maintained under the auspices of the
Columbia University Press, where officers and students may purchase
books and stationery at stated discounts from list prices.
THE GYMNASIUM
(See page 135)
UNIVERSITY COMMONS
The University Commons, for the accommodation of men living in
the Residence Halls, is conducted upon a system combining the
table d'hote and a la carte, the average weekly charge being $4.50. The
Commons, which has accommodations for 450 men, is in University
Hall and is open daily from 7.30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Under the same man-
agement is a large buffet lunch room. i
RESIDENCE HALLS
For Men
Hartley Hall, a memorial to the late Marcellus Hartley, and Living-
ston Hall, named in memory of Robert R. Livingston, of the Class of
1765, University dormitories on South Field, with accommodations
for 500 men, were opened in September, 1905. Each building is 10
stories in height exclusive of basement, and 137 feet long by 60 feet
wide. They are lighted throughout by electricity and heated by
steam, with telephone connection on each floor. There are four
electric elevators.
The two Halls contain 600 rooms, both single and double, all being
outside rooms; their arrangement permits of flexibility in renting
the rooms in suites. The average size of the bedr oms is about 8 feet
by 14.6. The studies average 10 by 14.6. feet. All rooms are nine
38 MEDICAL VISITOR
feet high. Each bedroom has a clothes-closet and an enamelled basin
with hot and cold water, and is provided with heavy oak furniture.
There are four shower-baths on each floor.
The only entrance to each building for students is on the side facing
the campus, and leads directly into an assembly room 60 feet square.
This room runs up through two stories and has a large open fireplace
opposite the entrance.
While Hartley Hall and Livingston Hall are open to all male students
of the University, students in Columbia College, in accordance with
the desire of the donors, Mrs. Helen Hartley Jenkins and Marcellus
Hartley Dodge, A.B. '03, are given the preference in the assignment
of rooms in Hartley Hall.
The average weekly charge for a single room is $3-30, or $129 for
the academic year of thirty-nine weeks. A pamphlet containing
floor-plans of the buildings and indicating the charge for each room
may be had upon application to the Secretary of the University. The
pamphlet contains also the Hall Regulations. Rooms will be as-
signed in the order of receipt of applications therefor. All such ap-
plications should be made in writing on a blank which will be provided
by the Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds.
The Residence Halls are supervised and controlled by a Council
composed of the Consulting Engineer, two University officers, and a
representative from each Hall. The Council is assisted by two Com-
mittees made up of residents in the Halls.
For Women
Whittier Hall, a dormitory building under the supervision of the
authorities of Teachers College, is situated on Amsterdam Avenue,
between 120th and 121st Streets, and has accommodations for 350
women. Inquiries regarding rooms, board, and the like, should be
addressed to the Secretary of Whittier Hall, 1230 Amsterdam Avenue.
Brooks Hall, the hall of residence for Barnard College students, is
on the north side of n 6th Street; it accommodates 90 students. For
details apply to the Secretary, Barnard College.
Other Living Accommodations
Besides these dormitories, there are many good boarding-houses and
apartments near the University. The careful selection, inspection,
and registration of such lodgings, etc., have been undertaken, and a
card-catalogue of apartments, rooms, etc., is kept at Earl Hall.
MEDICAL VISITOR
For the benefit of those members of the University who are with-
out family physicians in New York City the Trustees have designated
a Medical Visitor of the University, whose duties are to render medi-
cal assistance to such oiflcers and students as may desire it, either
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS 39
at their homes or elsewhere, at a remuneration to be arranged between
himself and individual patients. The Medical Visitor is Dr. D. S. D.
Jessup, whose office is at No. 301 West 108th Street (telephone 8153
Riverside). His office hours are from 5 to 6 p.m. daily, or by appoint-
ment at his office.
EARL HALL
Earl Hall, the home of the religious, philanthropic, and social or-
ganizations and interests of the University, is open from 8.30 a.m.
to 10 p.m. daily, to all students without expense, under the direct
management of the Secretary of Earl Hall, who is also Secretary of
the University Young Men's Christian Association.
The building may not be used for distinctly dogmatic or denomina-
tional religious teaching. All organizations the objects of which
are to promote the religious and philanthropic life of their student mem-
bers and of the student body at large have the privilege of holding their
meetings in this building. While the social purposes of the Hall are
necessarily subordinated to the other uses of the building, the Sec-
retary desires to promote the same type of informal personal and social
intercourse that prevails in a good club.
Provision for the regular meetings of student organizations is made,
on a day-and-hour schedule, without exclusive use of any of the rooms,
in the following order: societies the purpose of which is (1) primarily
religious; (2) primarily philanthropic; (3) primarily literary, and (4)
miscellaneous student organizations.
PUBLIC WORSHIP AND RELIGIOUS WORK
St. Paul's Chapel, the gift of Olivia Egleston Phelps Stokes and
Caroline Phelps Stokes, as a memorial to their parents, was dedicated
February 3, 1907. The Chapel is in the form of a cross, the greatest
length being 122 feet and the width at the transepts 77 feet. In all
1050 sittings are provided. Of these 120 are in the choir, which, as
in the English cathedrals, may itself be used for a religious service at
which the attendance is small.
Service, at which attendance is voluntary, is held every week-day
except Saturday, at noon, the period from 12 to 12.20 being set apart
by the University for religious exercises; and on Sunday afternoons at
4 p.m. There are also frequent organ recitals in the Chapel.
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Academic control of all student organizations, athletic and other,
which in any way represent the University before the public, is vested
in the University Committee on Student Organizations, appointed
by the President. The various organizations, while self-governing,
are subject to the regulations of the Committee in respect to their
organization, financial management, administration and discipline.
40 STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
The times and places of all public contests and performances must be
approved by the Committee. All budgets for expenditure must be
approved by the Comptroller of Student Organizations, an officer
appointed by the President, and each organization is required to keep
an accurate record of its financial operations in the office of the Comp-
troller. The University Committee on Athletics, also appointed by
the President, consisting of three graduates, two students and two
officers of the University, has authority to adopt and administer
rules of eligibility not involving questions of scholarship and to govern
the participation of the students of Columbia University in inter-
collegiate athletics. Participation in athletics without the approval
of the Committee is forbidden. A pamphlet containing the regulations
for student organizations may be obtained from the Secretary of the
University.
DIVISIONAL AND DEPARTMENTAL STATEMENTS
INTRODUCTORY
The courses of instruction are numbered in accordance with a plan
uniform throughout the University, and attention is called to the
following information which the number assigned to a course will in
each case indicate:
Odd numbers indicate the first, even numbers the second half of
the academic year. Courses designated 1-2, 21-22, etc., run through
both half-years; courses designated 1-4, 5-8, etc., run through two
complete academic years. Courses numbered between 1 and 100
are, in general, elementary and may not be offered in fulfilment of
the requirements for the higher degrees (A.M. and Ph.D.). Courses
numbered from 101-200 are primarily for students who hold a first
degree but are open to undergraduates who have completed 72 points
(for courses in law 94 points), including all prescribed work. In gen-
eral no such course may be taken without some elementary training in
the same or in some allied subject. Courses from 201-300 are re-
stricted to such graduate students as are qualified to pursue the work
to advantage. Seminars are numbered from 301 up. Attention is
called to the pamphlet entitled Instruction for Graduate Students lead-
ing to tlie Degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy, and
particularly to the fact that the requirements for the higher degrees
are based upon subjects and not upon courses. Students who wish to
offer a subject either as a major or minor should, before registration,
consult the officers of instruction concerned with regard to their se-
lection of courses.
Courses enclosed in brackets are not offered during 1907-08, and
any other course not applied for by at least three candidates for a
degree may be withdrawn by the instructor.
Any subject of study not appearing in its alphabetical order may
be found through the index.
With the exception of the courses in Mines, Engineering, Chemistry,
Medicine, and Law, all courses numbered over 101 are open to women
upon the same terms as to men, unless specific statement is made to
the contrary.
Unless otherwise stated, the number of hours given indicates the
hours of classroom work (lectures, conferences, and recitations) per
week. When a course involves both classroom work and laboratory
or draughting-room work the former will be indicated by C and the
4i
42 ANATOMY
latter by L and D, respectively. An "afternoon" implies three hours
a day, normally from i :oo to 4 :oo.
Students should note the distinction between a department and
a school. For instance, there is in the University both a Depart-
ment of Architecture and a School of Architecture; Departments
of Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Engineering and a School of
Engineering. The Departmental Statements which follow have to
do only with the giving of the instruction and the opportunities
for research in each special branch of study. The information as
to the conditions of admission to the courses, and the academic
credit to be received therefor, will be found under the information
relating to Colleges and Schools, pages 1 7 1 to 362, and in the separately
printed Announcements.
For the courses to be offered in fulfilment of the requirements for
the degrees of Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science, see pages 171
and 312 ; Bachelor of Laws, see page 193; Doctor of Medicine, see page
204; for the several degrees in mining, engineering, and chemistry, see
pages 229-235; and for Fine Arts — architecture, music, and design, —
see pages 290, 295, and 297.
It is not possible, within the limits of this volume, to give more
than the briefest outline of the courses. In some one of the
Bulletins of Information published by the University, and distributed
without charge upon application to the Secretary, a detailed state-
ment will be found of the scope of each course, the manner of
treatment, the courses prerequisite, and the like. A list of the
Bulletins will be found on page 415.
Attention is also called to the fact that, in addition to the following,
many courses are offered in the Summer Session and in Extension
Teaching. Full information as to these will be found in the Bulletins
of the Summer Session and of Extension Teaching.
Anatomy
George Sumner Huntington, M.D., Sc.D Professor
Bern Budd Gallaudet, M.D Adjunct Professor
H. von W. Schulte, M.D , .Adjunct Professor
Henry E. Hale, M.D Demonstrator
William Darrach, M.D Demonstrator
C. R. L. Putnam, M.D Demonstrator
Frederick T. van Beuren, Jr., M.D Demonstrator
None of the courses of the Department of Anatomy are open to
women.
Courses
See introductory paragraphs , page 41
51-52 — Vertebrate morphology — Anatomy of the body cavities —
ANATOMY 43
Visceral and topographical course — Thorax and abdomen. Lectures
combined with demonstrations. 3 hours. Professor Huntington
53_54 — Demonstrations to sections of the class — (A) Cranial oste-
ology. 2 hours first quarter. Professor Schulte. (B) Syndesmology,
myology, angeiology of head and neck, peripheral nervous system of
neck. 2 hours, second quarter. Professor Gallaudet. (C) Cranial
nerves, rhombencephalon and mesencephalon. 1 hour, second half
year. Professor Schulte
55-56 — Demonstrations to sections of the class — Osteology, syndes-
mology, myology, peripheral nervous system, and angeiology of the
extremities. Pharynx, larynx. 2 hours. Drs. Darrach and Van
Beuren
These courses are so arranged as to maintain, with reference to the
subjects treated, a direct connection with the laboratory course in
dissection, 57-58
57-58 — Laboratory course — Dissection of the human body. Mini-
mum requirement 3 periods of 4 weeks each. Professors Huntington,
Gallaudet, Schulte, and the Demonstrators of Anatomy
59-60 — Laboratory course — Dissection of the human body. Mini-
mum requirement 4 periods of 4 wTeeks each. Professors Huntington,
Gallaudet, Schulte, and the Demonstrators of Anatomy
63-64 — Demonstrations to sections of the class and conferences —
Visceral anatomy. Direct examination and demonstration of the
preparations serving to illustrate Course 51-52. 1 hour. Professor
Huntington
66 — Course in mammalian morphology — Introductory to physiology.
2 hours a week for one half-year. Dr. Van Beuren
Research
117-118 — The laboratory of animal morphology is open for research,
under the direction of the professor, to advanced workers. Professors
Huntington and Schulte
Optional Courses
61-62 — Anatomy of mouth, larynx, pharynx, auditory apparatus.
3 hours per week in second half-year. Professor Gallaudet
1 19-120 — Topographical anatomy of thorax. 3 hours per week in
second half-year. Dr. Putnam
121-122 — Topographical anatomy of the abdomen and pelvis.
Professor Huntington
123-124 — Anatomy of the joints. 2 hours per week second half-
year. Dr. Van Beuren
125-126 — Development and comparative anatomy of the heart
and vascular system. Professor Huntington
44 ANATOMY
127-128 — Development and comparative anatomy of the genito-
urinary system. Professor Huntington
128-129 — Development and comparative anatomy of the respiratory
tract. Professor Huntington
In all courses offered in morphology the work is designed to be
laboratory exercises of at least two continuous hours' duration, at any
one exercise, supplemented in certain courses by demonstration and
study of material contained in the Museum of Human and Compara-
tive Anatomy and in the study collections of the department.
The time required for the above courses, if offered as minors for the
degree of A.M. or Ph.D., or if taken as optionals, unless otherwise
specified, is half a day per week from October to April.
The demands on laboratory space and teaching force render it
necessary to limit the number of candidates admitted to these courses.
Anatomical Laboratories
The laboratory facilities of the Department of Anatomy are very
complete. The large general dissecting-room accommodates from 390
to 546 students, working in groups of five or seven at one table.
The laboratory for advanced morphological research occupies the
third story of the anatomical building. Every facility for advanced
and research work in morphology is here extended. The established
connections of the department furnish abundant human and com-
parative material, both mature and embryonal. The private library
of the Professor of Anatomy is at the disposal of advanced
workers.
Museum of Human and Comparative Anatomy
Much work has been done in the formation of a Museum of Human
and Comparative Anatomy, the ultimate design of which is to present
in as complete a manner as possible, a view of the evolution of the
forms of animal life, and of their natural relations both in series of
natural groups, and in the comparative and relative positions of organs
and systems. Even the approximate attainment of this aim will re-
quire much time and work, but sufficient progress has been made to
enable the department to offer great facilities for study and research.
The collection, both as regards groups and the individual preparations,
is designed for the illustration of both elementary and advanced
courses, and is largely used in the instruction of the medical under-
graduates and in advanced study and research.
During the past year the second floor of the anatomical building has
been furnished throughout with suitable exhibition and demonstration
stands. It is the intention of the department to install in this space
the portion of the collection most used in the medical courses, thus
establishing an undergraduate teaching museum which will both
AXTHROPOLOGY 45
increase the efficiency of the sectional demonstrations and render the
material upon which they are based available at all times for study
and research.
A study-collection of human osteological preparations is so admin-
istered as to enable every student to take out the different osteological
series and retain them for private study as long as required.
Anthropology
Franz Boas, Ph.D Professor
Livingston Farrand, A.M., M.D Professor
Marshall H. Saville Loitbat Professor of American Archeology
Clark Wissler, Ph.D Lecturer
Adolph F. Bandelier Lecturer in American Archeology
Berthold Laufer, Ph.D Lecturer in Chinese
Courses
See introductory paragraphs, page 41
1-2 — Anthropology, general introductory course — Lectures, essays,
and discussions. 2 hours. Professor Farrand
3 — The Negro Question. 1 hour. First term. Professor Boas
101-102 — General ethnography — Lectures, essays, and discussions.
2 hours. Professor Boas
103-104 — Prehistoric archaeology — Lectures, essays, and discus-
sions. 2 hours. Professor Saville and Dr. Berkey (of the Depart-
ment of Geology)
105-106 — Ethnology — Primitive culture — Lectures, papers, and
discussions. 2 hours. Professor Farrand
107-108 — Ethnography of America and Siberia. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Boas
111-112 — Archaeology and ethnography of China with special refer-
ence to Farther India and Central Asia. 2 hours. Dr. Laufer
[113 — Ethnography of Japan, Korea, and Formosa. 1 hour. Dr.
Laufer]
1 1 5-1 1 6 — Archceology of Mexico and Central America. 2 hours.
Professor Saville
117-118 — American languages — Lectures and discussions. 2 hours.
Professor Boas
129-130 — American languages — Advanced course. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Boas
1 19-120 — Morphology with special reference to Physical Anthro-
pology. Professor Huntington. (Not open to women.)
121-122 — Anthropometry. 2 hours lectures and 3 hours laboratory.
Professor Boas
46 ARCHITECTURE
[125-126 — Early Spanish sources for American ethnography. 2
hours. Mr. Bandelier]
127 — Archaeology of Peru. 1 hour one half-year. Mr. Bandelier
301-302 — Seminar in ethnology. 2 hours biweekly. Professor
Boas
201-202 — Research work in anthropology. Professors Boas, Far-
rand, and Saville, and Dr. Laufer
Laboratory work in Physical Anthropology is carried on in the
Anatomical Department of the University and in the Anthropological
Department of the American Museum of Natural History.
The collections and apparatus of the American Museum of Natural
History may be used by students of Anthropology. The extensive col-
lections of ethnological and archaeological material in the Museum are
utilized in connection with the lectures given in the department and
are available for research work.
Architecture
Alfred D. F. Hamlin, A.M. . . .Professor of the History of Architecture
Frank Dempster Sherman, Ph.B Professor of Graphics
Maximilian K. Kress, A.M Adjunct Professor of Architecture
Charles Follen McKim, Litt.D Director of Atelier
Thomas Hastings, Diplome E.d.B.-A Director of Atelier
Charles A. Harriman Instructor in Architecture
Charles P. Warren, A.M Instructor in Architecture
John V. Van Pelt, Diplome E.d.B.-A.. .Associate Director of Atelier
William A. Delano, A.B Associate Director of Atelier
Francis A. Nelson, B.S., Diplome, E.d.B. -A. Lecturer in Architecture
Harvey Wiley Corbett, B.S., Diplome\ E.d.B.-A Associate
Director of Atelier
Edward R. Smith, A.B Curator of the Avery Library
William R. Ware, LL.D Emeritus Professor of Architecture
Courses
See introductory paragraphs, page 41
1 — The elements of architecture. Mouldings, the orders, inter-
columniation and superposition, balustrades, arcades, doors, windows,
roofs, spires, vaults, domes. 2 hours, and work in drafting-room.
Mr. Harriman
2 — Applied elements — Exercises in application of the orders and
other features in elementary design. 15 hours. Mr. Harriman
3 — Architectural drawing — 15 hours. Mr. Harriman
5 — Graphics — Shades and shadows, projections and intersections.
C 2 hours, D 5 hours. Professor Sherman
ARCHITECTURE 47
6 — Perspective. C 2 hours, D 5 hours. Twelve plates required.
Professor Sherman
7 — Descriptive geometry. C 2 hours, D 5 hours. Twelve plates
required. Professor Sherman
8 — Stereotomy. C 2 hours, D 5 hours. Professor Sherman
9-10 — Graphical analysis — Applications of graphical methods to
mathematical computations. 2 hours. Professor Sherman. (Op-
tional)
11-12 — Specifications. 2 hours. Mr. Warren
13-14 — Building materials. C 2 hours, D 3 hours. Mr. Warren
15-16 — Elementary structural design. 2 hours. Mr. Warren
17-18 — Engineering — Graphical statics and applied mechanics;
structural problems. C 3 hours, D 3 hours. Mr. Warren
21-22 — Ancient architectural history. 3 hours. Professor Kress
23-24 — Mediaeval architectural history. C 2 hours, with collateral
reading (see 43-44), and 15 hours original research for six weeks.
Exercises in historical design (see 61-64). Professors Hamlin and
Kress
24a — Architectural essays — Papers prepared in connection with
research on mediaeval history. Professor Hamlin
25-26 — Modern architectural history — The Renaissance and modern
architecture. C 2 hours and 15 hours research for six weeks. Exer-
cises in historical design (see 61-64). Professors Hamlin and Kress
260 — Architectural essays — Papers prepared in connection with
research on modern history. Professor Hamlin
31-32 — History of ancient ornament. 1 hour. Professor Kress
33-34 — History of mediaeval ornament. 1 hour, with exercises in
decorative design. Professor Hamlin
35_36 — History of modern ornament — Renaissance and modern
ornament. 1 hour, with exercises in decorative design. Professor
Hamlin
41-42 — Historical reading in French (in connection with 21-22).
2 hours. Professor Kress
43-44 — Historical reading in French and German (in connection
with 23-24). 2 hours. Professor Kress
5 1-52 — Theory of architecture — Planning and Composition. 1 hour.
Professor Hamlin and others
53 — Theory of decorative arts — 1 hour. Professor Hamlin and
others
54 — Theory of color. 1 hour. Professors Hamlin and Hallock
55 — Theory of professional practice — 1 hour. Professor Hamlin
and others
48 ARCHITECTURE
61-62 — Elementary design — Exercises chiefly in composition of
exteriors. 15 hours, first half-year, and for 9 weeks of second half-
year. Professors McKim and Hastings, Messrs. Van Pelt, Delano,
Corbett, and Nelson
63-64 — Intermediate design — Problems and sketch designs, includ-
ing both planning and composition. 15 hours, first half-year, and
for 9 weeks of second half-year (see 161 and 261). Professors McKim
and Hastings, Messrs. Corbett, Van Pelt, Delano, and Nelson
71-72 — Freehand drawing — Elementary course. 6 hours. Mr.
Harriman
72a — Summer work — Drawings and designs to be executed during
the summer vacation following the first year of residence
73-74 — Freehand drawing — Intermediate course. 6 hours. Mr.
Harriman and Mr. Smith
74a — Summer work — Drawings and designs to be executed during
the second summer vacation
75-76 — Drawing from the cast. 5 hours. Mr. Harriman
76a — Summer work — Drawings and designs to be executed during
the third summer vacation
113-114 — Advanced practice. D 6 to 12 hours, in connection with
117-118. Mr. Warren
117-118 — Advanced engineering design and calculation (in connec-
tion with 113-114). 24 hours. Mr. Warren
128 — Advanced essays — Summer vacation essay; thesis disserta-
tion previous to graduation
161-162 — Advanced design. 20 to 30 hours. (63-64 prerequisite.)
Professors McKim and Hastings, Messrs. Van Pelt, Delano,
Corbett, and Nelson
164 — Thesis — Advanced design or research; drawings with ac-
companying dissertation. 20-30 hours for 8 to 12 weeks previous to
graduation. Professors McKim and Hastings, Messrs. Van Pelt,
Delano, Corbett, and Nelson
177-178 — Advanced drawing — From the antique and from life.
6 hours (at the studios of the National Academy of Design)
213-214 — Graduate course in practice — Original investigations and
accompanying reports. 6 hours. Mr. Warren
217-218 — Graduate course in engineering — Four advanced problems
in structural design. 20 to 30 hours. Mr. Warren
221-222 — Graduate essays — Original research with accompany-
ing reports. 4 to 6 hours. Professor Hamlin
261-262 — Graduate design — Advanced problems, etc. 20 to 30
hours. Professors McKim and Hastings, Messrs. Van Pelt, Delano,
Corbett, and Nelson
ASTRONOMY 49
Astronomy
Harold Jacoby, Ph.D Rutherfurd Professor
Charles Lane Poor, Ph.D Professor
S. Alfred Mitchell, Ph.D Instructor
Courses
See introductory paragraphs, page 41
The courses in geodesy are not open to women.
1-2 — General astronomy — Historical and descriptive. 2 hours.
Dr. Mitchell, and for work in the Wilde Observatory, Professor
Jacoby.
103-104 — Spherical and practical astronomy — A more mathematical
treatment, including practical use of instruments. 2 hours lectures
and 2 hours observatory work. Professor Jacoby
105 — Geodesy — Brief history of geodetic operations and description
of instruments, including their adjustment and use. 2 hours. Dr.
Mitchell
106 — Geodesy — Applications of practical astronomy to geodetic sur-
veying. 2 hours. Dr. Mitchell
S107 — Geodesy — Summer course in practical geodesy. Given in the
field, each student making his own observations and calculations
Six weeks of practical work from June 1, at Osterville, Mass. Pro-
fessor Jacoby and Dr. Mitchell with assistants
109 — Geodesy — Derivation of formula? used in summer-course work,
adjustment of observations, followed by several lectures on de-
scriptive astronomy. 2 hours. Dr. Mitchell
201-202 — Advanced spherical and practical astronomy. 2 hours
lectures and 4 hours observatory work for two years. Professor
Jacoby
203-204 — Theoretical astronomy — Theory of comet orbits with
practical applications. 1 hour, supplemented by computation, for two
years. Professor Poor
205-206 — Theory and method of reduction of photographic star
plates — Determination of star places. 1 hour, with practical work, for
two years. Professor Jacoby
207-208 — Method of least squares, with applications to astronomy
and geodesy. 1 hour. Professor Jacoby
209-210 — Celestial mechanics — Elementary course. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Poor
211-212 — Advanced course in celestial mechanics. 1 hour for one
or two years. Professor Poor
50 BACTERIOLOGY AND HYGIENE
213-214 — Astronomical spectroscopy. 1 hour supplemented by
laboratory work. Dr. Mitchell
Astronomical and Geodetic Equipment
The new Wilde Observatory contains an equatorial telescope, with
clockwork and accessories. The University has also a very complete
collection of instruments for the application of astronomy to geodesy:
A Bamberg universal combined prismatic transit and zenith telescope
of 4-inch aperture. A Wanschaff zenith telescope of 8-cm. aperture,
suitable for latitude measures of the highest precision. Two Wan-
schaff 8-inch microscope theodolites. Two Fauth 8- and 10-inch mi-
croscope theodolites. Secondary bar base and tape base apparatus,
with stretching machines. Complete outfit of engineer's instruments,
sextants, apparatus for barometric hypsometry, clocks, chronometers,
electric chronographs, etc. Five computing machines.
For the advanced study of astronomy proper, there are special
facilities including two Repsold measuring machines of the latest type
and a large collection of original astronomical photographs suitable
for measurement and reduction. These photographs were made by
Gill at the Cape of Good Hope, Rutherfurd at New York, Donner at
Helsingfors, Henry at Paris, Campbell at Mt. Hamilton, etc. Ample
funds are provided for the publication of researches in astronomical
photography. (See University Bibliography.) For research work in
astrophysics students have access to the well-equipped laboratories of
the Department of Physics.
In addition, there are a number of unmounted instruments including
Lewis Morris Rutherfurd 's famous 13 -inch equatorial, with its
attachments.
The University Library is especially strong in astronomy. Among
other important collections, it contains the private library of the
late Dr. Otto Struve, formerly director of the Pulkowa Observatory.
There is also a good working library in the department.
Bacteriology and Hygiene
Philip Hanson Hiss, Jr., M.D Professor of Bacteriology
Augustus B. Wadsworth, M.D Instructor in Bacteriology
Hans Zinsser, M.D Assistant in Bacteriology and Hygiene
David Gordon Allen. *Sl.T> . .Assistant in Bacteriology and Hygiene
Close association is maintained between this department and the
departments of Pathology and Clinical Pathology, so as to facilitate
instruction and research in these closely allied subjects.
Courses
For the significance of course numbers see page 41
51 — Practical instruction in bacteriology and hygiene, especially
BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY 51
adapted to the requirements of students of medicine. 4 hours. Pro-
fessor Hiss and Drs. Wadsworth, Zinsser and Allen
201 — Special laboratory course in advanced bacteriology and
bacteriological technique. Afternoons in November, December, and
January. Professor Hiss and Drs. Wadsworth and Zinsser
203 — Special laboratory course — as under Course 201 — with ad-
ditional time for the study of known species of bacteria, their chemical
products, and photomicrography; and original investigation. Pro-
fessor Hiss and Drs. Wadsworth and Leaming
Research
Research may be pursued in the laboratories of this department
by a limited number of properly qualified, advanced workers, under
the direction of the Professor.
Equipment
The Department of Bacteriology occupies the western section of the
fifth floor of the north wing of the building of the College of Physicians
and Surgeons. It comprises a large laboratory for the accommodation
of the undergraduate and advanced classes in bacteriology, a research
laboratory for special advanced workers, and rooms thoroughly
equipped for the preparation of culture media and for the chemical
study of bacterial products.
The laboratories are well equipped with all necessary apparatus
and with cold storage facilities. A large collection of bacterial
species is kept under cultivation.
Biological Chemistry
William J. Gies, M.S., Ph.D Professor
Nellis B. Foster, M.D Instructor
William N. Berg, Ph.D Tutor
James C. Greenway, A.B., M.D Assistant
Leo Kessel, M.D Assistant
Matthew Steel, M.S Assistant
William Weinberger, M.S., M.D Assistant
None of the courses at the College of Physicians and Surgeons is
open to women.
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
Course in General Chemistry
51 — General chemistry. C 4 hours, each section (2). L 6 hours,
each section (2). Professor Gies, Dr. Berg, and Mr. Steel
52 BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Courses in Physiological Chemistry
101 — General physiological chemistry. C 2 and L 6 hours. Pro-
fessor Gies, Drs. Foster, Berg, Greenway, and Kessel
102 — Elementary physiological chemistry. C 1 hour. April and
May (School of Pharmacy). Professor Gies
201-202 — Chemistry of digestion and nutrition. Lecture, 1 hour.
(School of Pharmacy). Professor Gies
203-204 — Laboratory course in quantitative physiological chemistry
with special reference to clinical methods. 6 hours. Professor Gies,
Drs. Berg and Weinberger
205-206 — Laboratory course in advanced physiological and patho-
logical chemistry. Research. 12 hours. Professor Gies and Drs.
Foster and Berg
Course in Toxicological Chemistry
207-208 — Laboratory course in toxicological chemistry. 6 hours.
Professor Gies
Course in Botanical Chemistry
209-210 — Laboratory course in the chemical physiology of plants.
6 hours. Professor Gies. [The course may be taken in whole or in
part at the New York Botanical Garden, where Professor Gies is con-
sulting chemist.]
Course in Co-operation with the Department of Physiology
In addition to the courses referred to above Professor Gies co-
operates with Professor Burton-Opitz in giving Course 101-102 in
Physiology.
Biochemical Seminar
301-302 — The members of the teaching staff and all other investi-
gators in the department meet weekly to study and discuss the re-
sults of recent searches in chemical biology. The Seminar is open to
all students in the University. 2 hours. Professor Gies in charge.
Research
The laboratory is open to advanced workers for research. Pro-
fessor Gies consults regularly with investigators in the department of
Zoology on Tuesday afternoons and at the N. Y. Botanical Garden on
Friday afternoons.
Library
The private library owned by Professor Gies is housed in the labo-
ratory at the medical school and is accessible by appointment to all
students in the University.
BOTANY 53
Equipment
The headquarters of the Department of Biological Chemistry are
situated at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, where six rooms are
well equipped for experimental work in biological chemistry. Two of
the rooms are relatively large and will each accommodate about
seventy workers at a time. Four smaller rooms are specially fitted up
for original investigations by advanced students.
A small laboratory in Schermerhorn Hall has been equipped for
research in biological chemistry to be carried out in co-operation with
the Department of Zoology. Similar provision has been made in
Fayerweather Hall for biochemical research in collaboration with
workers in the Department of Physics.
Special facilities have been provided at the New York Zoological
Park for research there in biological chemistry under the direction of
the head of this department.
The laboratories of the New York Botanical Garden are open to
students of biological chemistry.
Botany
* Lucien Marcus Underwood, Ph.D., LL.D Torrey Professor
Herbert Maule Richards, Sc.D Professor in Barnard College
Carlton Clarence Curtis, Ph.D Instructor
Tracy Elliot Hazen, Ph.D Instructor in Barnard College
Jean Broadhurst, B.S Instructor in Teachers College
Marion Elizabeth Latham, A.M Tutor in Barnard College
Elizabeth Ilsley Thompson, A.B Assistant in Barnard College
Chester Arthur Darling, A.M Assistant
Certain graduate courses at the New York Botanical Garden are
also given, either wholly or in part, by the following members of the
Garden Staff:
Nathaniel Lord Britton, Ph.D., Sc.D.. Emeritus Professor, Director
William Alphonso Murrill, Ph.D First Assistant
John Kunkel Small, Ph.D Head Curator of the Museums
Charles Stuart Gager, Ph.D Director of ilxe Laboratories
Per Axel Rydberg, Ph.D Curator
Arthur Hollick, Ph.D Curator
Marshall Avery Howe, Ph.D Curator
George Valentine Nash Curator of the Plantations
Henry Hurd Rusby, M.D Dean of the College of Pharmacy and
Curator of Economic Collections
William J. Gies, M.S., Ph.D Professor of Physiological Chemistry
and Consulting Chemist, New York Botanical Garden
Partial courses are also given by:
Elizabeth Gertrude Britton
Edward Sandford Burgess, Ph.D.
* Died November 16, 1907.
54 BOTANY
The undergraduate courses in Botany are designed to give a broad
general knowledge during the first year, and to permit some specializa-
tion thereafter. Graduate courses imply the completion of the
equivalent of four to six undergraduate courses.
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
1-2 — Nature and development of plant life. C 2 and L 4 hours.
Dr. Curtis and Mr. Darling
3 — Morphology of higher plants — Involving field work on adapta-
tion of structure to physical conditions. C 2 and L 4 hours. Dr.
Curtis
4 — Morphology of some group or groups of the lower plants. L 6
hours. This course naturally follows Course 3, to complete an elective
for the year. Mr. Darling
5 — Problems in botanical technique. L 6 hours. Dr. Curtis
6 — Economic botany — Study of plants useful to man. C i, L 3
hours. Professor Underwood
7 — Lectures on general botany — with special attention to the study
of timber trees in field and laboratory. Professor Underwood and
Mr. Darling
101-102 — Plant physiology — A course in experimental physiology
supplemented by selected readings and conferences. 2 laboratory
sessions. Dr. Curtis
Courses 201-239 are Ior research students and may be selected
by graduates as minor or major work.
201-202 — General physiology — Problems in absorption, excretion,
nutrition, and transformation of energy, growth, the general irritable
organization of the plant, and the mechanism of its movements.
Professor Richards and Dr. Curtis
203-204 — Physiological anatomy — Problems in the relationships of
tissues and functions. Dr. Curtis
205-206 — Physiology of the cell — Problems in the chemical and the
physical properties, movements, and irritability of unicellular and
other generalized organisms. Professor Richards
207-208 — Physiology of nutrition — Treated from a chemical stand-
point. Professor Richards and Professor Gies
209-210 — Ecological physiology — Problems in adaptive reactions in
form, structure, and movements to external energy and environmental
factors. Drs. Gager and Curtis
211-212 — General plant pathology. Also problems in immunity
and effects of unfavorable environment. Two summers in the field.
Dr. Murrill
BOTANY 55
213-214 — Morphology of spermatophyta — Study of the structure
and development of the seed plants. Dr. Curtis and Professor
Richards
215-216 — Experimental morphology — A study of the variation of
fonn and structure, and the determination of the causes. Professor
Richards and Drs. Curtis and Gager
217-218 — Embryology of spermatophyta. With special work
during two summers. Dr. Curtis
219-220 — Morphology of pteridophyta — Study of the structure and
development of the ferns and fern-allies. Professor Underwood
221-222 — Morphology of bryophyta, with special reference to the
diagnostic characters and relationships of the principal families and
genera. Professor Underwood, Dr. Howe, and Mrs. Britton
223-224 — Morphology of algae, with special reference to the diagnos-
tic characters and relationships of the principal families and genera.
Dr. Howe, Professor Richards, and Dr. Hazen
225-226 — Morphology of fungi — Study of the structure, polymor-
phism and development of the fungi, including culture methods. Dr.
Murrill and Professor Underwood
227-228 — Taxonomy of spermatophyta — Study of the principal
families. Professor Britton, Drs. Small and Rydberg
229-230 — Taxonomy of gramineas — Study of the diagnostic charac-
ters and relationships of the principal genera. Mr. Nash
231-232 — Taxonomy of pteridophyta — Study of the diagnostic char-
acters and relationships of the principal families and genera. Pro-
fessor Underwood
233-234 — Special taxonomy — Critical study of a family or genus of
plants of not less than fifty species. The group may be chosen from
the entire range of the vegetable world. Field, herbarium, laboratory,
and garden work. Directed, according to the group chosen, by Pro-
fessor Underwood, Professor Britton, Dr. Howe, Dr. Small, Dr.
Rydberg, Mr. Nash, Professor Burgess, and Mrs. Britton
235-236 — Regional botany — Collection, determination, and com-
parative study of the plants of some restricted area. At least two
summers in the field. Professor Underwood and Britton
237-238 — Plant geography — Occurrence, characters, and arrange-
ment of groups and formations. Relations of plant societies to one
another, and to topographic, climatic, and other conditions. Factors
governing distribution. Professors Britton, Richards, and Dr.
Curtis
239-240 — Developmental taxonomy — Fossil ancestors of some fam-
ily of plants. Dr. Hollick
301-302 — Seminar. — A seminar is held monthly at the botanical
laboratory in Schermerhorn for critical discussion.
56 BOTANY
Convention — A botanical convention is held monthly at the library
of the New York Botanical Garden, where members of the staff and
students either present the results of their own work or review the
progress of botanical research and publication elsewhere.
In Barnard College
51-52 — Principles of Plant Morphology and physiology — 5 hours,
lectures, demonstrations, and laboratory work. Professor Richards,
Miss Latham, and Miss Thompson
53_54 — General morphology and development of plants — C 2, L 4
hours. Dr. Hazen and Miss Thompson
Two additional hours of laboratory work may be taken, in which
case Botany 53-54 will count as five points.
55-56 — Morphology and classification of spermatophytes — With
practice in determination of species. 4 or 6 hours. Dr. Hazen
153 — Anatomy of vascular plants — C 2 and a minimum of L 6
hours. Professor Richards and Miss Latham
154 — Physiology of plants from standpoint of nutrition — C 2 and
a minimum of L 6 hours. Professor Richards and Miss Latham
[156 — Physiology of plants from standpoint of growth — C 2 and
a minimum of L 6 hours. Professor Richards]
158 — Structure and development of algae — Advanced course. C 1
L 6 hours. Professor Richards and Dr. Hazen
159 — Structure and development of fungi — Advanced course. C 1 ,
L 6 hours. Professor Richards
Courses 158 and 159 are not usually given the same year.
160 — Developmental anatomy — Practice in methods of technique.
8 hours of laboratory work with occasional lectures and outside read-
ing. Professor Richards
161-162 — Advanced physiology and morphology. Work will be
arranged to suit the needs of the students. Professor Richards and
Dr. Hazen
Equipment
The Department of Botany occupies the third floor of Schermer-
horn, and the laboratories and lecture-rooms are thoroughly equipped
for undergraduate work. A large general laboratory, lecture-room,
and morphological and physiological laboratories are supplied with
modern instruments for instruction and experiment. A sufficient num-
ber of standard botanical works and serials on the subject are reserved
for students' use in the general laboratory.
Similar opportunities for the work of women are offered in the
laboratories at Barnard College.
Graduate courses are conducted at the Museum of the New York
CHEMISTRY 57
Botanical Garden. By the agreement entered into between the Uni-
versity and the Garden, all the botanical collections and library of the
University (except such works as are needed in the undergraduate
courses) have been deposited in the Museum of the Botanical Garden
at Bronx Park; the Garden on its part supplies all needed facilities
for research for members of the staff and for properly accredited stu-
dents. This combination of forces not only places the Department of
Botany within reach of material equipment and collections not other-
wise available, but opens up facilities for research work under condi-
tions that are not excelled.
The Museum of the New York Botanical Garden is located in Bronx
Park, and its entire upper floor is devoted to research. The physio-
logical and morphological laboratories occupy the western end, and
the taxonomic laboratories and herbarium the eastern end. Among
the special features provided are to be mentioned the dark rooms,
photographic, operating, and balance room, and laboratory for physio-
logical chemistry. Ample opportunity for experimental work is
afforded by the open-air plantations and extensive horticultural houses.
The Columbia herbarium and the equally extensive collections of
the New York Botanical Garden are housed in the large room in the
east wing of the Botanical Museum. The cryptogamic collections are
arranged in special rooms. The entire aggregation of collections avail-
able for students is exceptionally full in every group of plants.
The portion of the University Library classified under Botany is
deposited in the library of the Museum building, where it can be con-
sulted in connection with the extensive supplementary collection now
owned by the New York Botanical Garden. The combined libraries
aggregate over 20,000 volumes. All the regularly published journals
devoted to Botany proper (over one hundred) are received, and the
sets of all are complete.
Chemistry
Charles F. Chandler, M.D., Ph.D., LL.D., Sc.D. .. Mitchill Professor
of Chemistry
Charles E. Pellew, E.M Adjunct Professor of Chemistry
Marston Taylor Bogert, A.B., Ph.B., Professor of Organic Chemistry
J. Livingston Rutgers Morgan, Ph.D Professor of Physical
Chemistry
James S. C. Wells, Ph.D.. .Adjunct Professor of Analytical Chemistry
{Qualitative)
Henry C. Sherman, Ph.D Professor of Organic Analysis
Samuel A. Tucker, Ph.B Adjunct Professor of Electro-Chemistry
Marie Reimer, Ph.D Instructor in Chemistry (Barnard)
Victor J. Chambers, Ph.D Instructor in Organic Chemistry
Everett J. Hall Instructor in Assaying
58
CHEMISTR Y
Floyd J. Metzger, Ph.D Instructor in Analytical Chemistry
Cavalier Hargrave Jouet, Ph.D Tutor in Analytical Chemistry
Arthur C. Neish, Ph.D Tutor in Chemistry
Charles H. Ellard, A.M. . Tutor in Analytical Chemistry {Qualitative')
Hal T. Beans, Ph.D Tutor in Analytical Chemistry {Qualitative)
Eleanor Keller, A.B Tutor in Chemistry {Barnard)
Otto Kress, A.M Tutor in Chemistry
William C. Uhlig, Ph.D Assistant in Analytical Chemistry
{Qualitative)
Grace Potter Reynolds, A.M Assistant in Chemistry {Barnard)
J. Edwin Sinclair, A.M Assistant in Analytical Chemistry
Charles E. Taylor, B.S., A.M. . . .Assistant in Analytical Chemistry
Eric Higgins, B.Sc Assistant in Physical Chemistry
Alfred Hoffman, Ph.D Assistant in Organic Chemistry
Courses
General and inorganic
Physical
Organic
Analytical
Industrial
Undergraduates
only.
119
20-39
40-59
60-79
80-99
Graduates and
Undergraduates.
100-119
120-139
140-159
160-179
180-199
Graduates
only.
200-219
220-239
240-259
260-279
280-299
See preliminary paragraphs, page. 41
Courses given in Havemeyer Hall, numbered between 100 and 200,
may be closed to women in the discretion of the Instructor.
1 or 2 — General elementary chemistry. C 3 hours, L 2 afternoons,
one half-year. Given both half-years. Dr. Neish
3-4 — General inorganic chemistry. 3 lectures and 1 recitation. Pro-
fessor Chandler, Mr. Kress, and others
7-8 — Inorganic chemistry. C 2 hours, L second half-year only, 5
afternoons. Professor Chandler
101-102 — Advanced inorganic chemistry. 2 hours. Professor
Pellew
21-22 — Elementary physical chemistry. C 3 hours, L second half-
year only, 1 afternoon. Professor Morgan and Assistant.
37 — Theoretical electro-chemistry. 2 hours. Professor Morgan
23-24 — Physical Chemistry, C 2 hours throughout the year, L 5
afternoons, second half-year only. Professor Morgan
121-122 — Physical chemistry, general course. C 3 hours through-
out the year, L 1 afternoon, first half-year only. Professor Morgan
and Assistant
CHEMISTRY 59
221-222 — Advanced physical chemistry, laboratory course. Con-
ferences, and L at least 16 hours. Professor Morgan
223-224 — Advanced physical chemistry, research. Laboratory
work and conferences. Professor Morgan
61 or 62 — Qualitative analysis. C 4 hours, L 15 hours. Professor
Wells, Mr. Ellard, and Drs. Beans and Uhlig
65 — Quantitative analysis, inorganic, short course for Electric Engi-
neering. C 2 hours, L 6 hours. Dr. Metzger and Dr. Jouet
66 — Quantitative analysis, inorganic, for Mining Engineering. C 3
hours, L 18 hours. Dr. Metzger, Dr. Jouet and Assistant
161-162 — Quantitative analysis, short course. 1 lecture and 8
hours laboratory work. Dr. Metzger and Assistant
163-164 — Quantitative analysis. C 4 hours, L 15 hours. Dr. Metz-
ger and Dr. Jouet
167-168 — Advanced inorganic analysis. C 2 hours, L 3 afternoons,
first half-year for course in Metallurgy, and 3 afternoons second half-
year for students in course in Chemistry who elect thesis work in
this course. Dr. Metzger
261-262 — Quantitative analysis — Special methods, gravimetric,
volumetric, and electrolytic. Conferences and laboratory work at
least 16 hours. Dr. Metzger
263-264 — Research. Conferences and laboratory work. 20 hours-
Original investigation in inorganic analysis or inorganic chemistry.
Dr. Metzger
171 — Quantitative analysis, organic and sanitary. C 4 hours, and
L practice 3 to 6 afternoons. Professor Sherman and Assistant
173-174 — Advanced proximate organic analysis. C 2 hours, L
second half-year, 5 afternoons, for students who elect thesis work in
this course. Professor Sherman
271-272 — Special methods of organic analysis and food investiga-
tion. Conferences and laboratory work 16 hours. Professor Sherman
273-274 — Research. Conferences and laboratory work 20 hours.
Original investigation in organic analysis or food chemistry. Pro-
fessor Sherman
169 or 170 — Assaying — Ores and metallurgical products. C 2 hours,
L 10 hours, first half-year for Mining Engineering and Metallurgy,
second half-year for Chemistry. Mr. Hall
160 — Special methods of assaying ores, alloys, and furnace products
— Comparison of methods and determination of losses. Conferences
and laboratory work at least 8 hours. Mr. Hall
147-148 — Organic chemistry, elementary lecture course. 2 hours.
Dr. Chambers
60 CHEMISTRY
43-44 — Organic chemistry, elementary laboratory course. 8 hours.
Dr. Chambers
141-142 — Organic chemistry — Comprehensive treatment of the sub-
ject. 4 lectures and 1 recitation, L first half-year, 4 afternoons. Pro-
fessor Bogert and Dr. Chambers
143-144 — Organic chemistry. Conferences, 2 hours, and for
students who elect thesis work in organic chemistry L second half-
year, 5 afternoons. Professor Bogert
241-242 — Advanced organic chemistry, laboratory course. 12
hours. Professor Bogert
243-244 — Advanced organic chemistry, research. Professor
Bogert
81-82 — Industrial chemistry, general course. 3 lectures. Professor
Chandler and Mr. Kress
83-84, 85-86 — Industrial chemistry, special course for students in
chemistry. 3 lectures for two years, one half the subject being dis-
cussed each year. Professor Chandler and Mr. Kress
87 or 88 — Industrial chemistry, laboratory practice for students in
chemistry. 3 afternoons. Professor Pellew
89 — Industrial chemistry, laboratory practice for students in
chemistry. Special applications. 1 afternoon. Professor Pellew
91-92 — Chemical microscopy. L 4 hours. Professor Pellew
93-94 — Electrochemistry. 2 hours, and in the second half-year
5 afternoons. Professor Tucker
[97 — Chemical factory apparatus and machinery. 3 hours ]
[98 — Cost of chemical operations in factories. 3 hours.]
181 or 182 — Industrial electrochemistry, laboratory practice. The
equivalent of 5 afternoons. Professor Tucker
295-296 — Industrial chemistry, advanced course — Original re-
search. Personal instruction and laboratory work. Professor Pellew
281-282 — Electrochemical research — Original investigations. 16
hours. Professor Tucker
283-284 — Advanced electrochemical research. Private study and
original investigations for two years. Professor Tucker
80 (a) — Factory inspection and summer memoir, 2nd year. Pro-
fessor Pellew
80 (b) — Factory inspection and summer memoir, 3d year. Pro-
fessor Pellew
Courses Given at Barnard College
The following courses are given separately at Barnard College : 5-6,
by Miss Reimer and Miss Keller; 135-136, by Professor Maltby;
CHEMISTRY 61
63, by Miss Keller; 64, by Miss Reimer; 41-42, by Miss Reimer;
43-44, by Miss Reimer; 145-146, an advanced course in Organic
Chemistry, by Miss Reimer.
Other Courses
For courses in Chemistry given at Teachers College and for courses
in Chemistry and Physiological Chemistry given at the College of
Physicians and Surgeons and at the College of Pharmacy, see the
Table of Contents and the special Announcements of these Schools.
Equipment
In Havemeyer Hall the Chemical Department is provided with
ample space for its museum, lecture-rooms, and laboratories, and every
convenience has been provided for both the instructors and students
working in the general or special courses.
There are five chemical lecture-rooms, all fully supplied with ap-
paratus and instruments, the desks being equipped with pneumatic
troughs, gas, pressure, exhaust, and electricity. The large chemical
lecture-room on the ground floor contains 315 seats.
The Museum of General Inorganic and Organic Chemistry and of
the Chemical Arts, a large room occupying the whole left wing of the
ground floor, contains the elements and all their more important com-
pounds, inorganic and organic; materials and products illustrating
the chemical arts, and numerous models, pictures, and diagrams.
The Qualitative Laboratory has 112 desks, each divided into two
sections, and each thoroughly equipped.
The Quantitative Laboratory has eighty-eight desks. Attached to
the main laboratory is a large, well-equipped balance-room, con-
taining accurate balances, and special rooms, provided with apparatus
for gas, water, food, and electrolytic analysis.
The Assay Laboratory is provided with crucible and muffle furnaces,
both gas and coal, for the fire assay of ores; also with crushing, pul-
verizing, and sampling machinery, balance-room, storeroom, and
thirty-six well-equipped working desks. It also contains all the appa-
ratus necessary for the wet assay of silver bullion and for laboratory
tests of ores.
The Organic Laboratory has forty large desks, provided with gas,
water, exhaust, and electricity, and has special rooms for balances,
pressure ovens, glass-blowing, and combustions.
The Laboratory of Industrial Chemistry, for the instruction of
students in practical operations and the solution of problems in sani-
tary chemistry and hygiene, is equipped for the manufacture of pure
chemicals from their raw materials on an industrial scale, with fine
batteries of steam evaporators, and with steam stills, centrifugals,
filter presses, crushers, and the like. It includes a dyeing laboratory
62 CIVIL ENGINEERING
with a large stock of dye-stuffs, and with the regular equipment for the
practical testing of dyes, including a calico-printing machine. Con-
nected with it is a photometer-room, containing a new and complete
outfit for the practical testing of illuminants.
It also includes a laboratory for chemical microscopy, newly equipped
with microscopes, polarized light apparatus, camera lucidas, etc., for
the practical use of the microscope in chemical operations.
A new Laboratory for Practical Electrochemistry has been provided.
The equipment consists of special motor-dynamos, one of which
furnishes direct current at low voltages to the students' desks for
general electrolytic work; the other provides heavy alternating current
to the electric furnace room ; this room is furnished with all appliances
for electric furnace work. The students' desks are fitted with special
switchboards and measuring instruments, and the laboratory has been
arranged for carrying on research work in all branches of electro-
chemistry.
The Laboratory of Physical Chemistry is well equipped with the
most recent apparatus adapted to a wide range of experimental work
in the branches of heat, light, and electricity as applied to chemical
problems.
The Chemical Library in Havemeyer Hall is supplied with an ex-
tensive collection of chemical books and journals, and is open from
9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m., and during the session of the University from
8.00 to 11.00 P.M.
The Department of Chemistry at Barnard College has laboratories
well equipped with every facility for the proper study of the subjects
offered. The desks have water, gas, and electricity.
There is a small library of useful reference books in chemistry to
which the students have free access during the entire day.
The laboratories and lecture-room of Teachers College are well
equipped for illustrating the teaching of Chemistry in secondary and
normal schools. In these the chemistry classes of the Horace Mann
School receive their instruction, and by observation and practical work
in connection with the classes the students in Education 92 are en-
abled to become familiar with the duties of a teacher of Chemistry.
Chinese
(See Oriental Languages)
Civil Engineering
William Hubert Burr, C.E Professor
Earl Brink Lovell, C.E Professor
Ira H. Woolson, E.M Adjunct Professor
Adolph Black, C.E Adjunct Professor
Chas. E. Morrison, C.E., A.M Tutor
CIVIL ENGINEERING 63
Myron Samuel Fai.k, C.E., Ph.D Lecturer
James S. Macgregor, M.S Assistant
Francis S. Foote, Jr., E.M Assistant
Daniel Gorren, C.E Assistant
Elihu Cunyngham Church, C. E Assistant
Courses
See introductory paragraphs, page 41
2 — Theory of plane surveying — for engineering students. 2 hours.
Professor Lovell and Mr. Foote
6 — Properties of materials — Timber; causes of decay and processes
of preservation; fire proofing, etc. 2 hours. Professor Woolson
7-8 — Properties of materials — Properties of constructive materials
by lecture and tests. 2 hours. L afternoon hours. Professor
Woolson
15 — Surveying practice — five weeks field work. Professor Lovell
and Assistants.
21 — Road engineering. 2 hours. Mr. Morrison #
23 — Theory of railroad surveying — for mining engineering students.
2 hours and one afternoon. Professor Lovell and Mr. Foote
25 — Surveying practice — for civil engineering students, — five weeks
field work. Professor Lovell and Assistants
26 — Hydrographic surveying — for civil engineering students, — two
weeks field and office work. Professor Lovell and Assistants
27 — Surveying practice — for mining engineering students, — five
weeks field work. Professor Lovell and Assistants
28 — Railroad surveying — for mining engineering students, — four
weeks field work. Professor Lovell and Assistants
51-52 — Theory of railroad location — for civil engineering students,
3 hours and one afternoon. Professor Lovell and Mr. Foote.
53-54 — Resistance of materials. 3 hours C and one afternoon D.
Professor Burr, Mr. Morrison, and Mr. Gorren
55_56 — Resistance of materials — testing Laboratory. One afternoon.
Professor Woolson and Mr. Macgregor
58 — Masonry structures. 3 hours C and one afternoon D. Mr.
Morrison
59 — Sanitary treatment of water-supplies and of sewage. 2 hours.
Professor Black
61 — Theory of trusses. 2 hours C and one afternoon D. Mr.
Morrison.
62 — Graphic statics — for civil engineering students. 2 hours C
and one afternoon D. Mr. Morrison
64 CIVIL ENGINEERING
64 — Graphic statics — for mining engineering students. 1 hour C
and one afternooon D. Mr. Morrison
71 — Railroad surveying — for civil engineering students, — four weeks
field work. Professor Lovell and Assistants
75 — Hydraulics — for civil engineering students. 3 hours and one
afternoon. Professor Black
76 — Hydraulics — for mining engineering students 3 hours (during
March, April, and May). Professor Black and Mr. Morrison
77 — Hydraulics — for electrical engineering students. 2 hours.
Professor Black
85 — Foundations. 2 hours. Professor Burr
87-88 — Design of bridges and buildings. 2 hours C and two after-
noons D. Professor Burr and Mr. Morrison
89-90 — Railroad engineering, construction, and operation. 3 hours
C and one afternoon D. Professor Lovell and Mr. Foote
94 — The design and construction of sewers and irrigation. 2 hours.
Professor Black
q8 — Water supply and river and harbor improvements. 2 hours.
Professor Black
100 — Graduation thesis — a project or thesis on some civil engineer-
ing subject, approved by the head of the department, is required of
every candidate for the degree of Civil Engineer
Courses in Sanitary Engineering
4! — Sanitary engineering of buildings. 2 hours. Professor Black
42 — General principles of hygiene and sanitary science. 2 hours.
Professor Black
81-82 — Heating and ventilation. 2 hours.
84 — Drainage of country districts and towns. 2 hours. Professor
Black
Summer Courses in Surveying
These courses are conducted during sixteen weeks each summer
vacation at a point in the country near Litchfield, Conn., where
ample facilities are provided for all requisite operations, and where
the topography is admirably adapted to the practical work of sur-
veying. The courses there given are those announced above under
the numbers 15, 25, 26, 27, 28, and 71. The University issues a
special pamphlet with regard to these courses, which may be had
upon application to the secretary.
CIVIL ENGINEERING 65
Advanced Courses
Minor Subjects
153-154 — Elasticity and resistance of materials.
257-258 — Elastic and masonry arches. Conferences with reading
and design work as required. Based upon Course 58.
275-276 — Hydraulics (Civil Engineering 75 with additional reading).
285-286 — Foundations, including theory of earth pressure (Civil
Engineering 85, with additional reading).
287-288 — Long-span bridges. Conferences with reading and de-
sign work as required. Based upon Courses 87-88.
Major Subjects
259-260 — Sanitary engineering. Based upon Course 59.
277-278 — Hydraulic engineering, including the hydraulics of rivers
and power plants and municipal water-works.
279-280 — Municipal engineering, including water-works, sewers and
sewage- works, streets, and other public works, and their adminis-
tration.
289-290 — The engineering of structures, including long-span
bridges and deep foundations, with methods of building them, and
advanced work in elasticity and resistance of materials.
Equipment
The department possesses an unusually full equipment of engineers'
and solar transits, levels, plane tables, compasses, and all accessories, as
well as smaller instruments. Current meters, hook gauges, and floats
of various types are also used in making observations on the flow in and
discharge of rivers and canals. A complete set of sections of iron and
steel shapes, models, and photographs of engineering works, together
with working plans of the latter, are in the department for the use of
students. The hydraulic laboratory affords opportunity for the prac-
tical operations of measuring the discharge through weirs and other
orifices, the flow through open channels and closed pipes, frictional and
other resistances in pipes and open channels, as well as for meter gaug-
ings, and for general hydraulic investigations. The testing work in
the mechanical laboratory includes the complete tests of various struc-
tural materials in tension, compression, bending, and torsion, includ-
ing the observation and digesting of all corresponding data.
A cement-testing laboratory is fully equipped with testing machines,
briquette moulds, tanks, and other apparatus requisite for all classes
of investigation in the nature and physical properties of cements and
cement mortars. All students are required to make and test briquettes
of cement and cement mortar, as well as to ascertain the weight,
66 CLINICAL INSTRUCTION
fineness, and other physical properties of such cement, sand, and mor-
tar as may be assigned to them for examination.
A laboratory for the testing of road materials is equipped with all
the necessary apparatus for the determination of the wearing and
cementing qualities of stone or other road material.
In addition, a great variety of large engineering works is continually
in process of construction in New York City and vicinity, and the
requisite steps are always taken to render them accessible to the stu-
dents of the department for examination and study.
The library facilities consist of an extensive collection of foreign
and domestic engineering books and periodicals, to which additions are
constantly being made. The collection of engineering literature forms
a part of the general Library of the University, and is available for
both undergraduate and post-graduate study.
Clinical Instruction
in Dermatology, Genito-Urinary Diseases, Laryngology, Ophthalmology,
Orthopedic Surgery, and Otology. For Clinical Instruction in Medi-
cine, Surgery, Obstetrics, Gynecology, Hydrotherapy, Neurology, and
Pediatrics, details will be found under the general heading of these
departments.
Virgil P. Gibney, M.D., LL.D Professor of Orthopedic Surgery
William K. Simpson, M.D Professor of Laryngology
Arnold H. Knapp, M.D Professor of Ophthalmology
Gorham Bacon, M.D Professor of Otology
James R. Hayden, M.D Professor of Genito-Urinary Diseases
Royal Whitman, M.D Adjunct Professor of Orthopedic Surgery
Walter F. Chappell, M.D Clinical Professor of Laryngology
Robert Lewis, Jr., M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in Otology
Richard Frothingham, M.D Instructor in Laryngology
Ward A. Holden, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Oplithalmology
Henry H. Tyson, M.D Instructor in Ophthalmology
George Sloan Dixon, M.D Instructor in Otology
Samuel W. Thurber, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Laryngology
Walter S. Reynolds, M.D., Chief of Clinic and Instructor in Genito-
Urinary Diseases
Charles H. Jaeger, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Orthopedic Surgery
T. Laurance Saunders, M.D Instructor in Otology
Harmon Smith, M.D Instructor in Clinical Laryngology
William Blancard, M.D Assistant in Genito-Urinary Diseases
CLINICAL INSTRUCTION 67
Clinical Assistants
In Orthopedic Surgery
Sigmund Epstein, M.D. Arthur Shoemaker, M.D.
Irving Steinhardt, M.D.
In Otology
Frank J. Blodgett, M.D. Matthew L. Carr. M.D.
Alfred Michaelis, M.D.
In Dermatology
John H. P. Hodgson, M.D. S. Dana Hubbard, M.D.
John Aldrich, M.D. J. D. Gold, M.D.
Charles T Dade, M.D. Shirley E. Sprague, M.D.
Geo. Howard Fox, M.D.
In Ophthalmology
John A. Jackson, M.D. Alfred Braun, M.D.
D. H. Levy, M.D. Christopher J. Astle, M.D.
Gerald H. Grout, M.D. Nathan Goodfriend, M.D.
In Laryngology
Arthur P. Coll, M.D. C. D. Van Wagenen. M.D.
John Leshure, M.D. T. Joseph Barry, M.D.
F. Conger Smith, M.D. Charles Osgood, M.D.
Irving W. Voorhees, M.D.
In Genito-Urinary Diseases
Walter B. Brouner, M.D. J. B. Stein, M.D.
S. W. Fowler, M.D. Chas. C. DeKlyn, M. D.
James A. Cowan, M.D.
All communications regarding these courses should be addressed to the
Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, 437 West $gth Street.
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
In Dermatology
51 — Clinical lectures at the Vanderbilt Clinic. 1 hour. (Omitted
1907-08)
53_54 — Practical instruction at the Vanderbilt Clinic in diagnosis
and treatment. 12 lessons for each student. Dr. Jackson
In Genito-Urinary Diseases
51-52 — Genito-urinary diseases — Clinical lectures at the Vanderbilt
Clinic. 1 hour. Professor Hayden
53-54 — Practical instruction at the Vanderbilt Clinic. 12 lessons
for each student. Drs. Reynolds and Blancard.
68 CLINICAL PATHOLOGY
55-56 — Hospital clinics. Bellevue Hospital, February, March, April,
and May. Professor Hayden
In Laryngology
51-52 — Didactic lectures. 1 hour. Professor Simpson
53-54 — Practical clinical instruction to sections in the use of instru-
ments. 12 lessons for each student. Dr. Thurber
55-56 — Individual clinical demonstrations, special attention being
given to the questions of general diagnosis, differential and bacterio-
logical diagnosis, and treatment. Dr. Frothingham
57-58 — Operative clinics at the Manhattan Eye, Ear, and Throat
Hospital. Professor Chappell and Dr. Smith
In Ophthalmology
52 — Clinical lectures, at the Vanderbilt Clinic. 1 hour. Professor
Knapp
53-54 — Practical instruction, at the Vanderbilt Clinic. 12 lessons
for each student. Drs. Holden and Tyson
56 — Operative clinics at the N. Y. Ophthalmic and Aural Institute.
Professor Knapp
In Orthopedic Surgery
51-52 — Clinic in orthopedic surgery and diseases of the joints at the
Vanderbilt Clinic. 1 hour. Professor Gibney
53-54 — Practical instruction. 8 lessons for each student, at the
Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled. Dr. Whitman. 8 lessons for
each student at the Vanderbilt Clinic. Dr. Jaeger
55-56 — Operations at the Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled
{optional). Professor Gibney
. In Otology
51 — Didactic lectures in pathology and therapeutic methods. 1
hour. Professor Bacon
53-54 — Practical instruction at the Vanderbilt Clinic. 12 lessons
for each student. Drs. Lewis, Saunders, and Dixon
55-56 — Operative clinics at the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary.
Professor Bacon
Clinical Pathology
Francis Carter Wood, M.D Professor
D. Stuart Dodge Jessup, M.D Assistant
Peter Irving, M.D Assistant
Edward Cussler, M.D Assistant
Herbert B. Wilcox, M.D Assistant
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE 69
Close association is maintained between this department and the
departments of Pathology and Bacteriology and Hygiene, so as to
facilitate instruction and research in these closely allied subjects.
Courses
52 — Systematic instruction in clinical pathology. 6 hours for one
quarter of the academic year. Professor Wood and Drs. Jessup and
Wilcox
53_54 — Practical exercises in clinical pathology to sections in the
Vanderbilt Clinic Laboratory. 10 hours for one fourth of the academic
year. Professor Wood and Drs. Cussler and Irving
200 — Special laboratory course in clinical pathology. Professor
Wood
Research
Qualified workers may pursue research either in the laboratory
of Clinical Pathology on the fourth floor of the north wing of the College
building, in the Vanderbilt Clinic Laboratory, or in the Pathological
Laboratories of St. Luke's and the German Hospital. Professor Wood
Equipment
Systematic instruction in clinical pathology is given in the west
lecture-room on the fifth floor of the Vanderbilt Clinic building.
Students are furnished with apparatus sufficient to enable them to
carry out such tests as are necessary for the exposition of the subject;
and demonstrations are made of special methods and more complicated
apparatus. In order to permit the student to make independently
such examinations as are needed in the diagnosis and treatment of
disease, a new laboratory has been erected between the Vanderbilt
Clinic and the Sloane Maternity Hospital, with accommodations and
apparatus for twelve workers. In this laboratory the students make
examinations of the secretions and excretions of patients from the
clinical courses at the Vanderbilt Clinic and the hospitals.
Comparative Literature
Jefferson Butler Fletcher, A.M Professor
Joel Eli as Spingarn, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
1-2 — Introduction to European literature from the Renaissance
to the present day. 3 hours. Professor Spingarn
101-102 — The Renaissance in Europe. Introductory course. 2
hours. Professors Fletcher and Spingarn
[201-202 — The comparative study of literature: its methods and its
problems. 2 hours. Professor Fletcher]
70 COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
203-204 — History of literary criticism in modern Europe. 3 hours.
Professor Spingarn
[205-206 — The theory and practice of criticism in modern Europe.
2 hours. Professor Spingarn]
211-212 — European literature from the end of the Middle Ages to
the climax of the Renaissance. 2 hours. Professor Fletcher
213-214 — The literary relations of England and the Continent in
the sixteenth century. 2 hours. Professor Fletcher
221-222 — European literature from the climax of the Renaissance
to the end of the seventeenth century. 2 hours. Professor Spingarn
[223-224 — The literary relations of England and the Continent
during the seventeenth century. 2 hours. Professor Spingarn]
301-302 Seminar — The Elizabethan drama in relation to its sources.
2 hours. Professor Fletcher
303-304 Seminar — Continental Sources of English literature during
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. 2 hours. Professor
Spingarn
305-306 Seminar — The tradition of chivalry in modern literature.
2 hours. Professor Spingarn
315-316 — Special Topics in Comparative Literature. Professors
Fletcher and Spingarn
Equipment
The officers of the department have given much attention to the
requirements of their courses in the matter of learned publications,
the books of specialists in literary topics, the particular collections
grouped about great authors, and the rarer literature of the world of
letters. The general subjects of literary history and criticism and the
latest phases of literary scholarship are well represented in the Li-
brary, and those subjects with which the courses directly deal are
represented with unusual fulness. A special effort has been made
to gather beforehand the literature of subjects for research, so that
there may be no delay in providing such material. In the last few
years several thousand volumes have been purchased by the depart-
ment with a particular view to the needs of students, and it is be-
lieved that, within the limits of study, the collections are ample; and
whatever books prove to be required will be at once obtained. Sub-
stantially all periodicals of the literary or learned world are currently
received, and in files of such publications, transactions of societies,
and the like the Library is uncommonly rich, as well as in foreign
dissertations. These are the treasuries of information for minute
research. In the Library a special study room is provided for the
department, in immediate communication with the books relating to
its specific subject.
DISEASES OF CHILDREN 7 I
Design.
For list of officers and other information see Faculty of Fine Arts, p. 287
1-2 — History of art — Collateral reading and research. 4 hours.
Professors Dielman, Dow, and Mr. E. R. Smith
101-102 — History of art — Advanced reading and research. 8
hours. Professors Dielman, Dow, and Mr. E. R. Smith.
Diseases of Children
L. Emmett Holt, M.D., LL.D., Sc.D Carpentier Professor
Henry W. Berg, M.D Instructor in Contagious Diseases
Linnaeus Edford La Fetra, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor
John Howland, M.D Instructor in Contagious Diseases
Frank S. Meara, M.D Tutor
Malcolm Goodridge, M.D Assistant
Sidney V. Haas, M. D Assistant
Robert H. McConnell, M.D Assistant
Abraham Jacobi, M.D., LL.D Emeritus Professor
Clinical Assistants
Louis M. Silver, M.D. Arthur W. Bingham, M.D.
Albert F. Brugman, M.D. M. H. Sicard, M.D.
Andrew B. Yard, M.D. Charles Herrman, M.D.
Edward Miller, M.D. Geo. A. Schnepel, M.D.
Herbert B. Wilcox, M.D. Ira A. Wile, M.D.
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs , page 41
52 — Didactic lectures at the College. 1 hour. Professor Holt
51 — Clinical lectures at the Vanderbilt Clinic. 1 hour. Professor Holt
53-54 — Hospital clinic — Foundling or Babies' Hospital. 3 hours.
Professor Holt
55-56 — Practical instruction at the Vanderbilt Clinic in diagnosis and
treatment. 10 lessons for each student. Dr. La Fetra
57 — A weekly recitation in pediatrics for each student for half the
year. Dr. Meara
59-60 — Bedside instruction in contagious diseases at the Willard
Parker, Scarlet Fever, and Riverside Hospitals to small sections of the
class. Dr. Howland and Dr. Berg
61-62 — Practical clinical instruction — Bellevue Hospital Out-
Patient Department. Drs. Meara and Goodridge
Bedside instruction in the wards of Bellevue Hospital. Dr. Meara.
Post -Graduate Instruction
A limited number of students will be received in this department for
post-graduate instruction.
72 ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE
No students will be admitted for less than one half the academic
year, and applicants must have had a previous hospital training.
The instruction will include clinical work in general diagnosis and
treatment of diseases of children in the wards of the Babies' and
Foundling Hospitals, and in the Children's Ward of Bellevue, and in
the Vanderbilt Clinic, together with special instruction in contagious
diseases at Willard Parker and the Scarlet Fever Hospital, and oppor-
tunities for witnessing post-mortem examinations.
Domestic Art
Twelve courses in Domestic Art are offered under the auspices of
Teachers College. For details see the Announcement of Teachers Col-
lege and the special circular of the department.
Domestic Science
Twelve courses in Domestic Science are offered under the auspices of
Teachers College. For details see the Announcement of Teachers
College and the special circular of the department.
Economics and Social Science
Edwin R. A. Seligman, Ph.D., LL.D McVickar Professor
Franklin Henry Giddings, Ph.D., LL.D Professor
John Bates Clark, Ph.D., LL.D Professor
Henry Rogers Seager, Ph.D Professor
Henry Ludwell Moore, Ph.D Professor
Vladimir Gr. Simkhovitch, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Edward Thomas Devine, Ph.D., LL.D Schiff Professor
Samuel McCune Lindsay, Ph.D Professor
Rudolf Leonhard, J.U.D Kaiser Wilhelm Professor
Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch, M.A. (Mrs.) . . . .Adjunct Professor
Alvan A. Tenney, Ph.D Tutor
George J. Bayles, Ph.D Lecturer in Ecclesiology
Eugene E. Agger, Ph.D Lecturer
Robert E. Chaddock, A.M Lecturer
Courses in Political Economy and Finance
See introductory paragraphs, page 41
A — Outlines of economics — Recitations, lectures, and essays. $
hours. Professor Moore, Dr. Agger and Mr. Chaddock (Barnard
College)
1-2 — Introduction to economics — Practical economic problems —
Lectures and recitations. 3 hours. j Professors Seligman and Seager,
Dr. Agger, and Mr. Chaddock
4 — Economic history of England and America — Selected text-books,
ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE 73
recitations, essays, and lectures. 3 hours. Professor Moore, Dr.
Agger and Mr. Chaddock (Barnard College).
101-102 — Taxation and finance — Lectures and private reading. 2
hours. Professor Seligman
[103 — Money and banking — Lectures, discussions, and reading. 2
hours. Professor Moore]
[104 — Commerce and Commercial Policy — Lectures, discussions
and reading. 2 hours. Professor Moore]
Courses 101-102 and 103-104 are combined at Barnard under the name of
Practical Economics, and are given as a 2-hour course (120) by Professor Sbagbr.
105 — The labor problem — Lectures and private reading. 2 hours.
Professor Seager
106 — The trust and corporation problem — Lectures and private
reading. 2 hours. Professor Seager
107 — Fiscal and industrial history of the United States — Lectures
and private reading. 2 hours. Professor Seligman
108 — Railroad problems, economic, social, and legal — Lectures and
private reading. 2 hours. Professor Seligman
109 — Communistic and socialistic theories — Lectures and private
reading. 2 hours. Professor Clark
no — Theories of social reform — Lectures and private reading. 2
hours. Professor Clark
120 — Practical economics — Lectures and assigned readings. 2 hours.
Professor Seager (Barnard)
[201 — Economic readings I : classical English economists — Lectures,
assigned readings, and reports. 2 hours. Professor Seager]
[202 — Economic readings II: contemporary economists. 2 hours.
Professor Seager]
[203-204 — History of economics — Lectures, discussions, and read-
ings. 2 hours. Professor Seligman]
205 — Economic theory I: the static laws of distribution — Lectures
and private reading. 2 hours. Professor Clark
206 — Economic theory II: the dynamic laws of distribution. 2
hours. Professor Clark
207 — Theory of statistics — Lectures and laboratory. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor H. L. Moore
209 — Quantitative economics I: advanced statistics. 2 hours.
Professor Moore
210 — Quantitative economics II: mathematical economics. 2
hours. Professor Moore
211 — Social Tendencies of German Legislation. 1 hour. Professor
Leonhard
74 ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE
241 — Economic and social evolution of Russia since 1800. 2 hours.
Professor V. G. Simkhovitch
242 — Radicalism and social reform as reflected in the literature of
the nineteenth century. 2 hours. Professor V. G. Simkhovitch
301-302 — Seminar in political economy and finance. 2 hours.
Professors Seligman, Clark and Seager
Courses in Sociology and Statistics
151 — Principles of sociology: analytical and descriptive. 2 hours.
Professor Giddings and Dr. Tenney
152 — Principles of sociology: historical. 2 hours. Professor Gid-
dings and Dr. Tenney
251 — Social evolution: ethnic and civil origins — Lectures and private
reading. 2 hours. Professor Giddings
252 — Social evolution: civilization, liberty, and democracy — Lec-
tures and private reading. 2 hours. Professor Giddings
255 — Theory of statistics — Lectures and laboratory. 2 hours.
Professor H. L. Moore
256 — Social statistics — Lectures and laboratory. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor H. L. Moore
257 — Historical types of society, ancient: the theory of progress.
2 hours. Professor Giddings
258 — Historical types of society, modern: the theory of progress.
2 hours. Professor Giddings
259 — Civil aspects of ecclesiastical organization — Lectures and pri-
vate reading. 1 hour. Dr. Bayles
3 1 1-3 1 2 — Seminar in sociology — 2 hours, bi-weekly. Professor
Giddings
Courses in Social Economy
281-282 — Poverty and relief — Lectures and discussions. 2 hours.
Professor Devine
283-284 — Social Legislation in the United States and Europe. I.
American Social Legislation, Federal and State (given in 1907-08);
II. American and European (England, France, and Germany) Social
Legislation (given in 1908-09). 2 hours. Professor Lindsay
[285 — The standard of living — Lectures and discussions. 2 hours.
Professor Devine]
[286 — The prevention and diminution of crime — Lectures and dis-
cussions. 2 hours. Professor Devine]
321-322 — Seminar in social economy. 2 hours. Professors Devine
and Lindsay
EDUCATION 75
Barnard College
11-12 — Life and Problems of the industrial population. 2 hours.
Professor M. K. Simkhovitch
13-14 — Social municipal progress. 2 hours. Professor M. K.
Simkhovitch
Equipment
The Library facilities are unexcelled. Every journal of importance,
American or foreign, dealing with economics or social science, is taken
regularly by the Library. Any book needed by advanced students
can usually be bought at once. The special library of history and
political science alone comprises more than eighty thousand volumes.
Students of economics and social science will find New York a
centre of library facilities unrivalled elsewhere in this country. In
addition to the University Library, there are rich treasures at the New
York Public Library on the Astor, Lenox, and Tilden foundation, New
York Historical Library, Long Island Historical Library, Library of
the New York School of Philanthropy, the Bar Association Library, and
the Law Institute Library, to each of which students have access
under favorable conditions. Advanced students also have at their
disposal the library of the McVickar Professor of Political Economy,
which contains one of the most complete collections of works on eco-
nomics to be found in the United States.
The facilities offered to students of sociology and social economy
include a large library of general and special works, and unusual oppor-
tunities for field work. A generous gift for works on sociology has pro-
vided a very complete equipment of publications on sociological theory,
the history of the family, pauperism, crime, and penology. Arrange-
ments have been made with the Charity Organization Society, the State
Charities Aid Association, the University Settlement, the East-Side
House, and the Brooklyn Bureau of Charities by which students can
become fully acquainted with actual work among the people and
with the most perfect methods.
The Statistical Laboratory, conducted by Professor H. L. Moore,
is equipped with the Hollerith tabulating machines, comptometers,
and all other modern facilities.
Students also have the privilege of attending all of the courses in
the School of Philanthropy conducted by the Charity Organization
Society.
Education
Teachers College is the Division of Education of Columbia Uni-
versity. In the section of the Catalogue devoted to Teachers College
(see Table of Contents) will be found a list of its officers and a state-
ment of its equipment for instruction and research in education.
76 EDUCATION
All Teachers College courses are open to men and women on equal
terms. For the significance of course numbers see page 4 1 .
A full statement of the nature of each of the following courses, the work
pre-requisite to it, and the credit which may be received for it in partial
fulfilment of the requirements for the several degrees and diplomas, and
similar statements concerning some sixty semi-professional courses
offered by Teachers College, but not listed here, will be found in the current
edition of the Announcement of Teachers College.
History and Philosophy of Education
B — History and principles of education. 3 hours. Professor
Monroe and Assistants
B6 — History of Education up to modern times — Second third of
Education B, above. 1 hour. Professor Monroe, Dr. Cole and Miss
Goodsel
[2 — Logic as applied to problems of teaching. 2 hours. Professor
Dewey]
5-6 — Modern educational theory. 2 hours. Professor MacVannel
3 2 — Social life and the school curriculum. 2 hours. Professor
Dewey
105-106 — Educational theories of Herbart and Froebel. 2 hours.
Professor MacVannel
201-202 — History and principles of education — Special graduate
section course B, above. 2 hours. Professor Monroe, Dr. Cole, and
Miss Goodsel
[203-204 — Practicum — History of education in the United States.
2 hours. Professor Monroe]
205-206 — Practicum — Philosophy of education. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor MacVannel
210 — Practicum — History of education in England. 2 hours.
Professor Monroe
303-304 — Seminar — History of education. Professor Monroe
3<>5-3o6 — Seminar — Philosophy of education. Professor Mac-
Vannel
Educational Administration
111-112 — School administration. 2 hours. Professor Dutton
113-114 — Administration of social education. 2 hours. Professor
Snedden
211-212 — Practicum — Administration of public education in the
United States. 2 hours. Professors Snedden and Dutton
213-214 — Practicum — Foreign school systems. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Snedden and Dean Russell
EDUCATION 77
311-312 — Seminar — Educational administration. Dean Russell
and Professors Snedden and Dutton
Educational Psychology
A (a) — General psychology. 2 hours, first half-year. Professor
Thorndike and Dr. Norsworthy
A(b) — Educational psychology. 2 hours, second half-year. Pro-
fessor Thorndike and Dr. Norsworthy
A(c) — Educational psychology. 1 hour, throughout the year. Pro-
fessor Thorndike and Dr. Norsworthy
21-22 — Child-study. 2 hours. Dr. Norsworthy
23 — The Psychology and education of exceptional children. 2
hours. Dr. Norsworthy and Professor Thorndike
121-122 — Genetic psychology, advanced course. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Thorndike
221-222 — Practicum — The application of psychological and statis-
tical methods to education. 2 hours. Professor Thorndike
321-322 — Seminar — Genetic and comparative psychology. Pro-
fessor Thorndike
401-402 — Colloquium. Professors Cattell, Thorndike, and Wood-
worth
Secondary Education
125-126 — Secondary education, general course. 3 hours. Professor
Sachs
127-128 — Secondary education in Germany. 2 hours. Professor
Sachs
225-226 — Practicum — Secondary education, advanced course 2
hours. Professor Sachs
325-326 — Seminar in secondary education. Professor Sachs
153-154 — The teaching of biological science in secondary schools.
3 hour9. Professor Bigelow and Miss Broadhurst
253-254 — Practicum in the teaching of biological sciences in sec-
ondary and normal school 2 hours. Professor Bigelow
55-56 — The teaching of domestic art. 3 hours. Professor Wool-
man and Miss Cooley
155-156 — Supervision and critic teaching in domestic art. 2 hours.
Professor Woolman
57-58 — The teaching of domestic science. 3 hours. Professor
Kinne and Miss Whittemore
157-158 — Supervision and critic teaching in domestic science. 2
hours. Professor Kinne
78 EDUCATION
257_258 — Practicum in domestic science. 2 hours. Professor
Kinne
161-162 — The teaching of English in secondary schools. 3 hours.
Professor Baker
261-262 — Practicum in the teaching of English. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Baker
63-64 — The teaching of "art. 3 hours. Professor Dow and Miss
Brooks
163-164 — Supervision of fine arts. 2 hours. Professor Dow
165-166 — The teaching of French. 3 hours. Professor Cohn
167-168 — The teaching of geography. 3 hours. Professor Dodge
and Miss Kirchwey
267-268 — Practicum in geography. 2 hours. Professor Dodge
169-170 — The teaching of German in secondary schools. 3 hours.
Professor Bagster-Collins
171-172 — The teaching of Greek in secondary schools. 3 hours.
Professor Lodge
173-174 — The teaching of history in secondary schools. 3 hours.
Professor Johnson
273-274 — Practicum in the teaching of history. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Johnson
175-176 — The teaching of Latin in secondary schools. 3 hours.
Professor Lodge
275-276 — Practicum in Latin — Caesar and Vergil. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Lodge
77-78 — The teaching of manual training. 3 hours. Professor
Richards
177-178 — Administration of industrial education. 2 hours.
Professor Richards
170-180 — The teaching of mathematics in secondary schools. 3
hours. Mr. Upton
[279-280 — Practicum in the history and teaching of mathematics. 2
hours. Professor Smith]
[379-380 — Seminar in the history and teaching of mathematics.
Professor Smith]
[81-82 — The teaching of music. 3 hours. Professor Farnsworth]
87-88 — Personal and school hygiene. 2 hours. Professor Wood
189-190 — The teaching of physical education. 3 hours. Professor
Wood, Miss Crawford, and Assistants.
1896-1906 — The teaching of gymnastics. 1 hour. Dr. Skarstrom
EDUCATION 79
289-290 — Practicum in physical education. 2 hours. Professor
Wood
191-192 — The teaching of physical science in secondary school.
3 hours. Professor Woodhull and Miss Van Arsdale
291-292 — Practicum in physical science. 2 hours. Professor
Woodhull
Elementary Education
7-8 — Kindergarten and primary work. 2 hours. Miss Fulmer
and Professor Strayer
[31 — Social life and school method. 2 hours. Professor McMurry]
33_34 — Theory and practice of teaching in elementary schools.
5 hours. Professor Strayer
330-340 — Theory and practice of teaching in elementary schools.
First section of above course. 1 hour. Professor Suzzallo
131-132 — Criticism and supervision of instruction. 3 hours. Pro-
fessor Suzzallo
133-134 — Supervision of instruction. 3 hours. Professor Suzzallo
13306-13406 — Supervision of instruction. Two thirds of above
course. 2 hours. Professor Strayer
233-234 — Practicum — Current problems in elementary education#
2 hours. Professor Strayer
333-334 — Seminar. Professors Suzzallo and Strayer
51-52 — Sunday-school instruction. 1 hour. Dr. Hodge
55-56 — The teaching of domestic art. 3 hours. Professor Wool-
man and Miss Cooley
155—156 — Supervision and critic teaching in domestic art. 2 hours.
Professor Woolman
57-58 — The teaching of domestic science. 3 hours. Professor
Kinne and Miss Whittemore
157-158 — Supervision and critic teaching in domestic science. 2
hours. Professor Kinne
61 — The teaching of English in elementary schools. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Baker
63-64 — The teaching of art. 3 hours. Professor Dow and Miss
Brooks
163-164 — Supervision of fine arts. 2 hours. Professor Dow
165-166 — The teaching of French. 3 hours. Professor Cohn
67-68 — The teaching of geography in elementary schools. 2 hours.
Professor Dodge and Miss Kirchwey
74 — The teaching of history in elementary schools. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Johnson
80 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
77-78 — The teaching of manual training. 3 hours. Professor
Richards
177-178 — Administration of industrial education. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Richards
79a — The teaching of mathematics in elementary schools. 1 hour.
Mr. Upton
[81-82 — The teaching of school music. 3 hours. Professor Farns-
worth]
183 — Lectures on the teaching of nature study. 2 hours. Professors
Bigelow and Woodhull
184 — Practical course in the teaching of nature-study. 2 hours.
Professors Bigelow and Woodhull
87-88 — Personal and school hygiene. 2 hours. Professor Wood
189-190 — The teaching of physical education. 3 hours. Professor
Wood, Miss Crawford, and Assistants
1890-1900 — The teaching of physical education in elementary
schools. 1 hour. Miss Crawford
1896-1906 — The teaching of gymnastics. 1 hour. Dr. Skarstrom
Kindergarten Education
5-6 — Modern educational theory. 2 hours. Professor MacVannel
7-8 — Kindergarten and primary work. 2 hours. Miss Fulmer
and Professor Strayer
41-42 — Kindergarten principles. 2 hours. Miss Fulmer
45-46 — Theory and practice of kindergarten teaching. 4 hours.
Miss McMahon
105-106 — Educational theories of Herbart and Froebel. 2 hours.
Professor MacVannel
141 — Kindergarten principles and practice. 2 hours. Miss Blow
145-146 — Kindergarten conference. 2 hours. Miss Hill
Nine other, introductory, courses in kindergarten are also given
Electrical Engineering
Francis B. Crocker, E.M., Ph.D Professor
George Francis Sever, M.Sc Professor
Morton Arendt, E.E Instructor
Edgar S. Downs, Ph.D Tutor
Victor R. Greiff, E.E Assistant
Stanley F. Bond, E.E Assistant
Professors Pupin and Wills of the Department of Physics give in-
struction in some of the theoretical branches of Electrical Engineering.
See the statement of the Department of Physics.
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 81
Courses
For the significa>ice of course numbers see page 41
1 — Elements of electrical engineering — General electrical princi-
ples, laws, measurements, and their applications. 2 hours. Mr.
Arendt and Dr. Downs
2 — Elements of the djmamo — The principles and general construc-
tion of dynamo-electric machinery. 1 hour. Professor Crocker and
Mr. Arendt
51 — Theory of the dynamo — Predetermination and study of char-
acteristic curves of dynamos and motors. 1 hour. Dr. Downs
52 — Design of direct-current machinery. Complete and original
design with all calculations and working drawings of a specially
assigned electric generator or motor. 2 hours and 1 afternoon. Pro-
fessor Sever
54 — Design of alternating-current machinery — Original design of
alternating-current generators, motors, transformers, etc. 2 hours.
Dr. Downs
56 — Electrical engineering. A study of the systems of direct current
distribution, direct current motors, and lighting equipments. 2 hours.
Professors Crocker and Sever
68 — Electrical engineering — The principles of electrical engineering
and their application to general engineering. 1 hour. Mr. Arendt
72 — Direct-current laboratory — Short course for students in Mining,
Civil, Sanitary, and Chemical Engineering, and Metallurgy. 1 after-
noon. Professor Sever and Assistants
73 — Direct-current laboratory — Short course for students in Me-
chanical Engineering. 1 afternoon. Professor Sever and Assistants
75 — Alternating-current laboratory — Short course for students in
Mechanical Engineering. 1 afternoon. Dr. Downs
98 — Graduation thesis for degree of Electrical Engineer — Original
work and report on a subject approved by the head of the department
101 — Dynamo and motor practice — Principles, construction, opera-
tion, and testing. 2 hours. Professor Sever
103 — Electric power — Electric motors, their action, control, and
application. 2 hours. Professor Crocker and Mr. Arendt
104 — Electrical plants — The design, installation, and operation of
electric lighting systems and plants, including a discussion of each
of the various elements employed. 2 hours. Professor Crocker and
Mr. Arendt
105 — Electrical distribution — Series, parallel, and multiple wire
systems; regulation of voltage and current; transformers; interior
wiring; meters; arc and incandescent lamps. 2 hours. Mr. Arendt
82 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
1 06 — Management of electrical plants — Economy in design, con-
struction, operation, organization, and administration. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Crocker and Mr. Arendt
no — Telegraph and telephone. 2 hours. Professor Crocker and
Mr. Arendt
112 — Electric railways — Their design, installation, and operation.
2 hours. Professor Sever
173-174 — Direct-current laboratory — Practice in the use of instru-
ments and in the operation and testing of direct-current dynamos and
motors. 2 afternoons. Professor Sever and Assistants
175-176 — Alternating-current laboratory — Practice in the use of
instruments and in the operation and testing of alternating-current
generators, motors, and transformers. 2 afternoons. Dr. Downs
and Assistants
177 — Electrical instrument laboratory. Electrical measurements,
storage-battery testing, photometry of electric lamps. 3 afternoons.
Professor Sever and Assistants
201-202 — Special problems and original investigations in electrical
engineering. Post-graduate work under the direction of the officers of
the department.
Equipment
The offices, laboratories, lecture- and other rooms of the Electrical
Engineering Department are in the south end of Engineering. In the
basement are situated the two machine laboratories, for direct- and
alternating-current machinery.
The various machines include examples of constant-potential gen-
erators, constant-current, arc-lighting dynamos, many types of sta-
tionary and railway motors, and motor-dynamos. Complete sets
of ampere, volt, and watt meters, speed indicators, and transmission
and absorption dynamometers are available for testing the various
dynamos and motors.
The alternating-current apparatus includes single-phase and poly-
phase generators, induction and synchronous motors, rotary con-
verters, and various types and sizes of transformers. Complete sets
of alternating-current measuring instruments and curve-tracing ap-
paratus are also provided.
The lecture-rooms are provided with an ample supply of electrical
energy of different forms, and other facilities for experimental demon-
strations. The museum contains cases for the collection of apparatus,
models, and materials relating to electrical engineering.
The large instrument laboratory on the third floor contains various
forms of galvanometers, ampere balances, potentiometers, standard
cells, and resistances, measuring apparatus, laboratory standard volt
J
ENGINEERING DRAFTING 83
and ampere meters. A storage battery is provided for testing pur-
poses and for calibration and standardization.
Engineering Drafting
Ralph E. Mayer, C.E Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Drawing
Samuel 0. Miller, C.E Tutor
Thomas H. Harrington, C.E Tutor
Morris F. Weinrich, Mech.E Assistant
Courses
See introductory paragraph, page 41
1-2 — (a) Elements of mechanical drawing; freehand lettering: (b)
Projections: (c) Machine drawing — sketches, tracing: (d) Topography
C 1 hour for one half-year, D 14 hours for one half-year. Professor
Mayer, Mr. Miller, Mr. Harrington, and Mr. Weinrich
3-4 — Descriptive geometry — Problems on point, line, and plane;
tangent planes; intersections; developments; warped surfaces. C 3
hours for one half-year. Professor Mayer, Mr. Miller, and Mr.
Harrington
5-6 — (a) Graphics — Shades and shadows; perspective; isometric
projection; cabinet projection: (b) Stone-cutting. C 1 hour and D
16 hours for one half-year. Professor Mayer and Mr. Miller
7-8 — (a) Structural drawing; (b) Machine drawing. C 1 hour and D
6 hours for one half-year. Professor Mayer, Mr. Miller, and Mr.
Harrington
English
Brander Matthews, D.C.L., Litt.D., LL.D Professor
George Rice Carpenter, D.C.L Professor
Franklin Thomas Baker, A.M Professor in Teachers College
» William Peterfield Trent, M.A., LL.D Professor
William Tenney Brewster, A.M Professor
George C. D. Odell, Ph.D Professor
Frederick Henry Sykes, Ph.D.. .Professor of English in Extension
Teaching
Ashley Horace Thorndike, Ph.D.. .Professor, and Secretary of the
Department
William Witherle Lawrence, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
George Philip Krapp, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Grace A. Hubbard, A.M Adjunct Professor
Mabel Foote Weeks, A.B Adjunct Professor
1 Virginia C. Gildersleeve, A.M Tutor
Ernest Sutherland Bates, A.M Tutor
William Belmont Parker, A.B Lecturer
1 Absent on leave.
84 ENGLISH
Algernon de V. Tassin, A.M Lecturer
Allan Ferguson Westcott, A.M Lecturer
Clyde Furst, A.M Lecturer in Extension Teaching
Azubah Julia Latham, A.B Lecturer in Teachers College
Alice Haskell, A.B Assistant
Adolphe Monell Sayre, A.B Assistant
Morris LeRoy Arnold, A.M Assistant
Bayard Boyesen, A.B Assistant
Charles Francis Lawson, A.M Assistant
John Warren Taylor, A.M Assistant
Courses
For the significance of course numbers see page 41
A — English literature and composition. 3 hours. Professor Odell,
Mr. Lawson, Mr. Taylor, and Mr. Boyesen (Columbia College)
Professor Brewster, Professor Weeks, Mr. Tassin, Mr. Westcott,
and Miss Haskell (Barnard College)
B — English literature and composition. 2 hours (Columbia) ; 3
hours (Barnard). Professor G. R. Carpenter, Mr. Bates, and Mr.
Sayre (Columbia) ; Mr. Parker, Mr. Westcott, and Miss Haskell
(Barnard)
1-2 — English composition — Daily themes and fortnightly essays,
lectures, and consultations. 3 hours. Mr. Tassin (Columbia); Pro-
fessor Brewster (Barnard)
7-8 — Elocution — Lectures and exercises. 2 hours. Mr. Parker
(Columbia) ; Mr. Tassin (Barnard)
11-12 — Public speaking and debating. 3 hours. Mr. Parker
(Columbia)
17-18 — English prose masterpieces. 2 hours. Professor G. R.
Carpenter (Columbia)
19-20 — American literature. 2 hours. Professor Brander Mat-
thews and Mr. Westcott (Columbia)
[21-22 — English Literature from 1780-1830. 3 hours. Professor
Odell (Columbia)]
Courses 21-22 and 23-24 are given in alternate years.
23-24 — English literature in the nineteenth century. 3 hours.
Professor Odell (Columbia) ; Professor Hubbard (Barnard)
[25-26 — English literature from 1557 to 1660. 3 hours (Columbia);
2 hours (Barnard). Professor Odell (Columbia); Professor Trent
(Barnard)]
Courses 25-26 and 27-28, are given in alternate years.
27-28 — English literature from 1660 to 1789. 3 hours (Columbia);
ENGLISH 85
2 hours (Barnard). Professor Odell (Columbia); Professor Hubbard
(Barnard)
29-30 — English literature of the earlier periods. 3 hours. Pro-
fessors Krapp and Lawrence (Barnard)
[31-32 — English literature in the sixteenth century. 2 hours.
Professor Trent (Barnard)]
35-36 — Shakspere. 2 hours. Professor Lawrence (Columbia) ;
Mr. Tassin (Barnard)
[37-38 — English prose exclusive of fiction. 2 hours. Professor
Brewster (Barnard)]
[39-40 — The development of English fiction. 3 hours. Professor
Brander Matthews and Mr. Westcott (Columbia) ]
41-42 — The development of the English drama. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Brander Matthews (Columbia)
Courses 41-42 and 43-44 are given at Barnard College in alternate years.
43-44 — English drama from 1642. 2 hours. Mr. Tassin (Barnard)
[45-46 — English literary criticism. 2 hours. Professor G. R.
Carpenter (Barnard)]
55-56 — Typical forms of literature. 2 hours. Professor Baker
(Barnard)
201 — English composition (advanced course). 2 hours. Professor
G. R. Carpenter
202 — The theory of literary art. 2 hours. Professor G. R.
Carpenter
[203-204 — The theory of English usage. 2 hours. Professor G.
R. Carpenter]
205-206 — English literary criticism. 2 hours. Professor G. R.
Carpenter
207-208 — English prose in the eighteenth century. 2 hours.
Professor Brewster
Courses 207-208 and 209-210 are given in alternate years.
[209-210 — English prose in the nineteenth century. 2 hours.
Professor Brewster]
2 1 1-2 12 — The principles of English philology. 2 hours. Professor
Krapp
Courses 211-212 and 213-214 are given in alternate years.
213-214 — Historical English grammar. 2 hours. Professor Krapp
215 — Anglo-Saxon prose. 2 hours. Professor Krapp
216 — Caedmon and Cynewulf. 2 hours. Professor Krapp
[218 — Beowulf. 2 hours. Professor Lawrence]
[219-220 — Middle English, language and literature. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Krapp]
86 ENGLISH
222 — Anglo-Saxon literature. 2 hours. Professors Krapp and
Lawrence
[225-226 — English literature from 1200-1557. 2 hours. Professor
Lawrence]
227-228 — Chaucer. 2 hours. Professor Lawrence
[229-230 — Mediaeval narrative literature. 2 hours. Professor
Lawrence]
[231-232 — English literature from 1625-1701. 2 hours. Professor
Trent]
[233-234 — English literature from 1 701-1798. 2 hours. Professor
Trent]
235-236 — English literature in the first half of the nineteenth
century. 2 hours. Professor Thorndike
Courses 231-232, 233-234, and 235-236 are given in successive years.
237-238 — Spenser. 2 hours. Professor Fletcher
241-242 — Development of the drama. 2 hours. Professor Bran-
der Matthews
[243-244 — Dramatists of the nineteenth century. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Brander Matthews]
245-246 — Moliere and modern comedy. 2 hours. Professor Bran-
der Matthews
[247-248 — English comedy: its history and its methods. 2 hours.
Professor Brander Matthews]
[240-250 — Shakspere as a playwright. 2 hours. Professor Bran-
der Matthews]
[251-252 — The English drama from the beginnings to 1642. 2
hours. Professor Thorndike]
Courses 241-242 and 251-252 are given in alternate years.
301-302 — Seminar — Shakspere's relation to the contemporary
drama. 2 hours. Professor Thorndike
303-304 — Seminar — Studies in Middle English literature. 2 hours.
Professors Krapp and Lawrence
305-306 — Seminar — Discussion of dissertations. Professors Thorn-
dike, Krapp, and Lawrence
Undergraduate Courses in Teachers College
T. C. 53-54 — English usage. 2 hours. Professor Baker
[T. C. 55-56 — English writers of the nineteenth century. 3 hours.
Professor Baker]
T. q_ 57-58 — Oral reading. 2 hours. Miss Latham
T. C. 59-60 — Typical forms of literature. 3 hours. Professor
Baker
GEOLOGY 87
Fine Arts
(See Architecture, Music, and Design)
In addition eight courses in Fine Arts are offered under the auspices
of Teachers College. For details see the Announcement of Teachers
College and the special circular of the department.
(See also the Statement of the School of Fine Arts in this volume.)
French
(See Romance Languages and Literatures)
Geography
Richard E. Dodge, A.M Professor
Clara B. Kirchwey Instructor
Courses
See introductory paragraphs, page 41
1-2 — General geography. 3 hours. Professor Dodge and Miss
Kirchwey
51 — -The geography of the United States. 2 hours. Professor
Dodge and Miss Kirchwey
52 — Man and his environment. 2 hours. Professor Dodge
S3 — Geography for teachers. 2 hours. Miss Kirchwey
See also Education 67-68, 167-168, 267-268
Equipment
The Department of Geography occupies a suite of five rooms on
the second floor of Teachers College. A lecture-room capable of
holding fifty, a well-lighted laboratory with table spaces for thirty,
two offices, and a large work- and stock-room, compose the suite.
The lecture-room is furnished with lantern, models, and wall maps;
the laboratory contains several large models, and has a set of the
more important weather instruments in an outdoor shelter. The sup-
ply of topographic, climatic, and special maps, of diagrams, of physical
models, and of lantern slides is large, and has been especially chosen
for use in the several courses announced above.
Geology
James Furman Kemp, E.M., Sc.D Professor
Amadeus William Grabau, S.D Professor
Charles Peter Berkey, Ph.D Instructor
Ida Helen Ogilvie, Ph.D Tutor in Barnard College
Alexis Anastay Julien, Ph.D Curator
William Campbell, Ph.D Special Lecturer
Edwin Kirk, A.B Assistant
88 GEOLOGY
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
1-2 — General geology. C 2 hours. L 2 hours. Professor Grabau,
Dr. Berkey, and Mr. Kirk
4 — Petrography. C 2 hours, L 1 afternoon for two months. Com-
pare Mineralogy 6. Dr. Berkey
5-6 — General geology. 3 hours. Professors Kemp and Grabau
and Dr. Berkey
16 — Index fossils of North America. C 1 hour, L 8 or more hours.
Pre-requisite, Course 1-2 or 5-6. Professor Grabau and Mr. Kirk
18 — General geology. C 3 hours lectures. Field work on Satur-
days (last six weeks). Dr. Berkey
105-106 — Economic geology. 3 hours. Professor Kemp
107-108 — Invertebrate palaeontology. C 2 hours, L at least 4 hours.
Professor Grabau and Mr. Kirk
no — Geological examinations and surveys — Field methods and
organization. 2 hours. Professor Kemp
112 — Field geology — One week's field work, and report upon the
same, immediately at the close of the spring examinations
201-202 — Petrology. C 2 hours, L at least 4 hours. Professor
Kemp and Dr. Berkey
205-206 — Comparative geology — A comparative description and
study of the geological formations of North America. 3 lectures and
4 hours reading and laboratory. Professors Kemp and Grabau
207-208 — A dissertation which will furnish the major course for the
concluding year of study for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
209-210 — Geology of Europe. 2 lectures and 4 hours laboratory
and library work. Professor Grabau and Dr. Campbell
211-212 — Phylogeny of a special group of fossil invertebrates. C
1 hour, L 6 hours. Professor Grabau
213-214 — Fossil faunas — Course 16 with additional conferences.
Professor Grabau
215-216 — Stratigraphy. Research course. L 6 hours or more.
Professor Grabau
301-302 — Pakeogeography of North America. Development and
changes of former continents and ocean basins. 1 hour seminar, and
laboratory according to arrangement. C 1 hour, L 6 hours to 2 days-
Pre-requisite, Geology 205-206, and 16 or 213-214. Professor Grabau
B 1-2 — General geology. Elementary course. C 2 hours, L 2 hours.
6 points. Dr. Ogilvie
GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES 89
B 101-102 — General geology. Course 1-2 with L 4 hours additional.
8 points. Dr. Ogilvie
B 113 — Summer field course — Two weeks in the field, and subse-
quent preparation of a report. Pre-requisite, B 101-102. Dr. Ogilvie
B 1 1 7-1 1 8 — Glacial Geology and Advanced Physiography. C 1
hour. L to be arranged. Pre-requisite 101-102. Dr. Ogilvie
B 1 19-120 — General geology, advanced course. C and L to be
arranged 4, 6 or 8 points. Pre-requisite 101-102. Dr. Ogilvie
The department has ample laboratories and a full equipment for
its several lines of work. For details see the separately printed
Announcement.
For the courses in geography see page 87
The following courses in paleobotany are offered at the New York
Botanical Garden by Dr. Arthur Hollick
General paleobotany — Developmental history and structure of the
fossil flora of some selected locality. Laboratory and museum.
Cretaceous flora of eastern North America — Collection and deter-
mination of specimens from some station with attention to strati-
graphic relations. Field and laboratory.
The palasobotanical library and collections of Columbia University
have been deposited at the New York Botanical Garden.
Germanic Languages and Literatures
William Henry Carpenter, Ph.D Villard Professor of Germanic
Philology
Calvin Thomas, LL.D., Gebhard Professor of the Germanic Languages
and Literatures
Elijah William Bagster-Collins, A.M Adjunct Professor in
Teachers College
William Addison Hervey, A.M Adjunct Professor
Rudolf Tombo, Jr., Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Arthur F. J. Remy, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Germanic Philology
Wilhelm Alfred Braun, Ph.D Instructor in Barnard College
Frederick William Justus Heuser, A.M Tutor
Alexander Otto Bechert, A.M Tutor in Barnard College
Allen Wilson Porterfield, A.M Tutor in Barnard College
Ernst Richard, Ph.D Lecturer
For the significance of course numbers see page 41
Courses in German
A i-A 2 — Elementary course. 3 hours. Professor Hervey and
Mr. Heuser
B i-B 2 — Intermediate course. 3 hours. Professor Remy and Mr.
Heuser
9© GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
2 — Longer elementary course. 5 hours. Professor Remy and Mr.
Heuser
3-4 — Composition and colloquial practice. Elementary course. 2
hours. Mr. Heuser
5-6 — Selected works of Goethe, Schiller, and Lessing. 3 hours.
Professor Hervey
7 — Historical prose. 2 hours. Professor Tombo
8 — Historical prose. 2 hours. Professor Tombo
9 — Lessing's Laokoon. 2 hours. Professor Remy
10 — Lessing's Hamburgische Dramaturgie. 2 hours. Professor Remy
11-12 — Composition and colloquial practice. Advanced course. 2
hours. Dr. Braun
13 — Selections from nineteenth century writers: Kleist and Grill-
parzer. 2 hours. Mr. Heuser
14 — Selections from nineteenth century writers : Hebbel and
Ludwig. 2 hours. Mr. Heuser
15-16 — Goethe. Life and selected works. 2 hours. Professor
Hervey
101 — History of German literature from the earliest times to the
Reformation. 2 hours. Professor Thomas
102 — History of German literature from the Reformation to the
nineteenth century. 2 hours. Professor Thomas
103-104 — Goethe's Faust. 2 hours. Professor Hervey
105 — German literature in the nineteenth century. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Thomas
106 — The contemporary German drama, with special reference to
Hauptmann and Sudermann. 2 hours. Professor Tombo
107-108 — History of the German language. 2 hours. Professor
W. H. Carpenter
[109-110 — Old High German. 2 hours. Professor W. H.
Carpenter]
111-112 — Middle High German. Linguistic course. 2 hours.
Professor Hervey
[11 3-1 14 — Middle High German. Literary course. 2 hours Pro-
fessor Hervev]
115-116 — Old Saxon. 2 hours. Professor W. H. Carpenter
129-130 — Outlines of the history of German civilization. 2 hours.
Dr. Richard
131-132 — German civilization in the middle ages. 2 hours. Dr.
Richard
GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
91
51-52 — German in secondary schools. 3 hours. Professor Bagster-
Collins. Given in Teachers College
53-54 — Educational German. 2 hours. Professor Bagster-Collins.
Given in Teachers College
[141-142 — Modern German syntax. 2 hours. Professor Bagster-
Collins. Given in Teachers College]
143-144 — Phonetics. 2 hours. Professor Bagster-Collins. Given
in Teachers College
Education 169-170 — Theory and practice of teaching German in
secondary schools. 3 hours; practical work, 2 hours. Professor
Bagster-Collins. Given in Teachers College
201-202 — Proseminar. Great German writers. Lessing (first half-
year). Goethe (second half-year). 2 hours. Professor Thomas
[203-204 — Proseminar. Great German writers. Schiller (first half
year). Heine (second half-year). 2 hours. Professor Thomas]
[207-208 — The Storm and Stress Period. 2 hours. Professor Hervey]
Courses in Scandinavian Languages
[117-118 — Swedish. 2 hours. Professor Thomas]
1 19-120 — Danish. 2 hours. Professor Thomas
121-122 — Icelandic. Elementary course. 2 hours. Professor W .
H. Carpenter
[123-124 — Icelandic. Advanced course. 2 hours. Professor W.
H. Carpenter]
Course in Dutch
[125-126 — Dutch. 2 hours. Professor W. H. Carpenter]
Course in Gothic
127-128 — Gothic. 2 hours. Professor Remy
Germanic Philology
205-206 — General introduction to Germanic philology. 2 hours.
Professor Remy
210 — Germanic mythology. 2 hours in second half-year. Professor
W. H. Carpenter
2 1 1-2 1 2 — Current bibliography. 1 hour. Professors W. H. Car-
penter, Thomas, Hervey, Tombo, Remy
Germanic Seminar
301 — The beast epic in German literatuie. 2 hours. Professor W.
H. Carpenter
92 GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
302 — Shakspere in Germany. 2 hours. Professor Thomas
The Seminar is open to advanced students only. Attendance at the meetings
will be obligatory upon candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy whose
major subject lies in this department.
Public Lectures
Lectures in the German language on popular subjects, intended
primarily for the students of the University, but to which the general
public is also invited, are given each year under the auspices of the
department.
Journal Club
The Journal Club is an organization founded in 1902 for the purpose
of reviewing and discussing important contributions to recent numbers
of the numerous journals devoted to Germanic studies. The Club
consists of the officers, fellows, and scholars of the department. Meet-
ings are held once in two weeks in the departmental library.
Deutscher Verein
The Deutscher Verein of Columbia University, founded in 1898, is
an association of the students and instructors of the University who
are interested in the culture of the German language and literature,
and in the acquisition of a more intimate knowledge of Germany, of
German institutions, and of the German people than is furnished by
academic study alone. The active membership consists of instructors
in all departments of the University, of students in residence to the
limited number of fifty, and of previous members of the Verein who
are no longer students. An honorary membership is made up of
prominent German-speaking citizens of New York. Stated meetings
are held on the second and fourth Mondays of each month in the
room assigned to the Verein in West Hall, which is accessible at all
times and forms a convenient club and reading-room.
Equipment
The University Library offers excellent facilities for the study of
German, both on the literary and the linguistic side. In German
literature most periods are well represented. The Goethe collection,
which consists of more than 1300 titles, affords to the student of Ger-
many's greatest author an exceptional opportunity for the prosecution
of his researches. The Scandinavian collection contains a good repre-
sentation of the ancient saga and poetical literature, and most of the
eminent writers of modern Norway, Denmark, and Sweden. The
Holland Society library, deposited with the University in 1901, con-
tains a considerable collection of books and pamphlets in the Dutch
language from all periods.
GREEK 93
The Library has sets and the current numbers of all the important
periodicals which deal with Germanic literature and Germanic and
general philology. It has also sets of periodicals no longer published,
and a large collection of the transactions and publications of the learned
societies of America and Europe.
A reference library of 1200 volumes, containing the most important
subsidia for the critical study of the Germanic languages and litera-
tures— dictionaries, bibliographies, biographies, histories of literature,
and the like — and independent of the main collection in the University
Library, is placed in a room adjacent to the main lecture-room and
the offices of the department in University Hall.
The income of the Carl Schurz Library Fund ($10,000), contributed
by citizens of New York in commemoration of the seventieth birthday
of Carl Schurz, is, by the terms of the gift, devoted in perpetuity to the
purchase of books in the field of the German language and literature.
For the Carl Schurz Fellowship in the German Language and Litera-
ture, see page 392.
Greek
Edward Delavan Pt . - :, Ph.D., LL.D Jay Professor
James Rignall Wheeler, Ph.D Professor of Greek Archeology
and Art
Gonzalez Lodge, Ph.D Professor of Latin and Greek
in Teachers College
Clarence Hoffman Young, Ph.D Professor
Charles Knapp, Ph.D Professor of Classical Philology
Gertrude Mary Hirst, Ph.D Instructor in Classical Philology
in Barnard College
Roscoe GuERNSEY.^Ph.D Tutor
Theodore Leslie Shear, Ph.D Tutor in Classical Philology in
Barnard College
Edgar H. Sturtevant, Ph.D Tutor in Classical Philology in
Barnard College
Courses
For the significance of course numbers see page 41
1-2 — Elementary course. 5 hours. Dr. Guernsey
3-4 — First half-year: Plato and Lysias. Second half-year:
Homer's Odyssey, selections. Greek prose composition. 3 hours.
Dr. Guernsey
5-6 — First half-year: Euripides and Sophocles; required reading
and lectures on the Greek drama. Second half-year: Demosthenes,
with required reading as above. 3 hours. Professor Young (first
half-year) and Dr. Guernsey (second half-year)
94 GREEK
An additional hour weekly in advanced Greek composition is offered.
21-22 — Rapid reading of Homer. 2 hours. Professors Wheeler
and Perry
25-26 — First half-year: Sophocles and Aristophanes. Second half-
year: Thucydides. For private reading in the course of the year:
Plato, Protagoras or selections. 3 hours. Dr. Guernsey (first half-
year) and Professor Young (second half-year)
27-28 — Greek composition, advanced course. One session weekly,
with written exercises, counting as a two-hour course. Professor
Young. Open to women graduate students.
29-30 — New Testament, Greek. 2 hours. Professor Young
103-104 — Lectures on Greek literature. Part II: Prose. 2 hours.
Professor Wheeler
107-108 — Aristotle, Constitution of Athens. 3 hours. Professor
Young
109-110 — Lyric and Bucolic Poets. 3 hours. Professor Perry
149-150 — Introduction to classical archaeology. 2 hours. Pro-
fessors Wheeler, Young, and Olcott
153-154 — Introduction to Greek archaeology. Part II: Sculpture.
2 hours. Professor Young
159-160 — The Acropolis of Athens. 2 hours. Professor Wheeler
251-252 — Greek dialectic inscriptions. 2 hours. Professor Perry
Classical Proseminar
301-302 — Lectures on the principles and methods of classical study,
with Greek and Latin bibliography, and exercises. 2 hours. Profes-
sors Perry and Peck
Classical Seminar
303-304 — Greek section: Euripides. One session weekly through-
out the year, counting as a three-hour course. Professor Wheeler
Courses in Barnard College
1-2 — Beginners' course: Grammar, composition, Xenophon's A nab-
asis, Homer's Iliad. 5 hours. Dr. Sturtevant
3-4 — Homer and Euripides. Greek life and thought. 3 hours.
Dr. Shear
5-6 — Plato and Xenophon. Prose composition. 3 hours. Miss
Hirst and Dr. Shear
7-8 — Sophocles and Aristophanes. 2 hours. Professor Knapp
9-10 — Herodotus and Demosthenes. 3 hours. Miss Hirst
11-12 — Rapid reading of Homer. 2 hours. Dr. Sturtevant
GYNECOLOGY 95
15-16 — iEschylus and Thucydides. 3 hours. Dr. Shear
17-18 — Elementary Greek prose composition. 1 hour. Dr. Shear
19-20 — Greek literature. 2 hours. Dr. Shear
21-22 — Intermediate Greek prose composition. 1 hour. Miss Hirst
23-24 — Advanced Greek prose composition. 1 hour. Miss Hirst
25-26 — Greek life and thought. 1 hour. Dr. Shear
Courses in Teachers College
Education 171-172 — Theory and practice of teaching Greek in sec-
ondary schools — Lectures reports, and practical work. 3 hours.
Professor Lodge
Gynecology
Edwin B. Cragin, M.D Professor
Porter F. Chambers, M.D Clinical Professor of Gynecology
Frank R. Oastler, M.D Clinical Lecturer and Instructor
Frank S. Mathews, M.D Instructor
Howard C. Taylor, M.D Instructor
William P. Healy, M.D Instructor
Charles J. Proben, M.D Instructor
George H. Ryder, M.D Instructor
Clinical Assistants
Wm. L. Bradley, M.D. Percy H. Williams, M.D.
Harold D. Meeker, M.D.
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
52 — The principles and practice of gynecology — Lectures, 3 a week,
2 didactic and 1 clinical. Professor Cragin
53 — Recitations and demonstrations. 1 hour a week for each stu-
dent. Dr. Mathews
55-56 — Minor operations and demonstrations to small sections at
the Roosevelt Hospital. 2 a week for four weeks. Dr. Taylor
57-58 — Practical instruction in diagnosis, treatment, and the use of
instruments. 12 lessons for each student, at the Vanderbilt Clinic.
Drs. Oastler, Proben, Healy, and Ryder
59-60 — Hospital clinic in operative gynecology — Roosevelt Hospital,
McLane Operating Theatre, Dr. Tuttle (optional)
61-62 — Clinic in Operative Gynecology — Woman's Hospital. Tu. at
2.30 p.m. Professor Chambers
96 HISTORY AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Histology and Embryology
(See note under Pathology, top of page 126)
Frederick Randolph Bailey, M.D Adjunct Professor
Adam Marion Miller, A.M Instructor
Oliver S. Strong, A.M., Ph.D Instructor
Charles Everett Banker, M.D Assistant
Charles Hendee Smith, M.D Assistant
Courses
51-52 — Practical instruction in histology and embryology. i\
hours. Professor Bailey and Drs. Strong, Miller, Banker, and
Smith
Equipment
Instruction in histology and embryology is given in the east labo-
ratory on the upper floor of the north wing of the Medical School.
This is a large, well lighted, and fully equipped laboratory in which
each student is assigned a table which he occupies during the course
and which is supplied with a microscope and with the instruments
and reagents necessary for the practical laboratory work.
History and Political Philosophy
William Milligan Sloane, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D. Seth Low Professor
Herbert Levi Osgood, Ph.D., LL.D Professor
William Archibald Dunning, Ph.D., LL.D.. Lieber Professor of
History and Political Philosophy
James Harvey Robinson, Ph.D Professor
William Robert Shepherd, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
James Thompson Shotwell, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
George Willis Botsford, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Vladimir G. Simkhovitch, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Carlton Huntley Hayes, A.M Lecturer
Maude Aline Huttmann, A.M Lecturer
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41.
A1-A2 — Epochs of ancient, mediaeval, and modern history. 3
hours. Columbia College, Professor Shepherd, Mr. Hayes, and
assistants. Barnard College, Professor Shotwell and Miss Huttmann
[3-4 — Greece and early Rome. 3 hours. Professor Botsford]
5-6 — The Roman empire. 3 hours. Professor Botsford
HISTORY AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY 97
[7-8 — Mediaeval and modern history to the peace of Westphalia.
3 hours. Professor Shotwell]
9-10 — Continental European history, modern and contemporaneous.
3 hours. Columbia College, Professor Shotwell and Mr. Hayes;
Barnard College, Professor Shotwell and Miss Huttmann
11-12 — Survey of English history. 3 hours. Professor Beard
13-14 — History of the United States to the close of Reconstruction.
3 hours. Columbia College, Professor Dunning; Barnard College,
Professor Shepherd
103 — History of India and of Persia. 2 hours. Professor Jackson
104 — The rise of Arabian civilization and the spread of Mohammed-
anism. 2 hours. Professor Gottheil
109 — The history of Western Asia and Egypt. 2 hours. Professor
Prince
111-112 — The language, literature, government, and social life of
the Chinese. 1 hour. Professor Hirth
113-114 — History of China. 1 hour. Professor Hirth
1 21-122 — The intellectual history of western Europe from the break-
up of the Roman empire to the Protestant revolt. 2 hours. Colum-
bia College, Professor Robinson and Mr. Hayes; Barnard College,
Professor Robinson and Miss Huttmann
[125-126 — Constitutional history of England to 1660. 2 hours.
Professor Osgood]
[151 — European history, 1815-1848. 4 hours. Professor Sloane]
153 — Contemporary European history since 1848. 4 hours. Pro-
fessor Sloane
I57_I58 — History of Great Britain during the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries. 2 hours. Professor Osgood
161-162 — Political and constitutional history of the United States.
2 hours. Columbia College, Professor Burgess; Barnard College, Pro-
fessor Shepherd
1 81-182 — General history of political theories. 2 hours. Professor
Dunning
[213-214 — The period of transition in Roman history from the
republic to the empire. 2 hours. Professor Botsford]
215-216 — Greek constitutional history. 2 hours. Professor Bots-
ford
217-218 — The Roman empire. 2 hours. Professor Botsford
221 — Later Roman empire and early middle ages. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Shotwell
[223 — Europe in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. 2 hours.
Professor Shotwell]
98 HISTORY AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
226 — -The so-called Italian renaissance and the opening of the
Protestant revolt. 2 hours. Professor Robinson.
229-230 — Ancient and mediaeval church history. ' Professors Mc-
Giffert and Rockwell
231-232 — Modern and American church history. » Professor Rock-
well
233-234 — History of thought in the primitive Catholic Church. »
Professor McGiffert
235-236 — History of Protestant thought. • Professor McGiffert
237 — English church history. « Professor McGiffert
238 — History of early Christian literature. « Professor McGiffert
239-240 — Principles and methods of historical investigation. » Pro-
fessor Rockwell
241-242 — Religious thought in the middle ages.i Professor Mc-
Giffert
243 — History of the church during the first three centuries.2 Pro-
fessor Kinsman
244 — Period of the councils. 2 Professor Kinsman
245 — Studies in the apostolic age.2 Professor Kinsman
246 — Church of the middle ages and continental reformation.2
Professor Kinsman
247 — History of the church of England.2 Professor Kinsman
248 — The church in Smyrna.2 Professor Kinsman
249 — The church in Jerusalem.2 Professor Kinsman
[252 — The reforms of the French revolution. 4 hours. Professor
Robinson]
253 — The economic and social evolution of Russia since 1800. 2
hours. Professor Simkhovitch
261-262 — American colonial history during the seventeenth century.
2 hours. Professor Osgood
[263-264 — American colonial history during the eighteenth century.
2 hours. Professor Osgood]
267-268 — The United States from 1850, with special reference to the
Civil War and Reconstruction. 2 hours. Professor Dunning
271-272 — History of Spanish America. 2 hours. Professor
Shepherd
[273-274 — The development of the West since 1803. 2 hours.
Professor Shepherd]
[281-282 — American political philosophy. 2 hours. Professor
Dunning]
1 Given at the Union Theological Seminary.
2 Given at the General Theological Seminary.
HISTORY AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY 99
311-312 — Seminar in Greek and Roman history. 2 hours, bi-
weekly. Professor Botsford
321 — Historical bibliography; the sources of European history;
methods of historical study. 2 hours. Professors Robinson, Shot-
well, and Simkhovitch
331-332 — Seminar in church history. » Professors McGiffert and
Rockwell
357 — The work of Napoleon. 2 hours. Professor Sloane
361-362 — The American Revolution. 2 hours. Professor Osgood
[363-364 — Seminar in American colonial history. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Osgood]
365 — European politics and the war of 1812. 2 hours. Professor
Sloane
[367-368 — Seminar in later United States history. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Dunning]
371-372 — Seminar in the early history of the South and West. 2
hours, bi-weekly. Professor Shepherd
381-382 — Seminar in political philosophy. 1 hour. Professor
Dunning
Equipment
The University Library contains many of the great published col-
lections for the study of ancient, mediaeval, and modern history.
The special library of history and political science numbers upwards
of 120,000 volumes. The great libraries of New York, Astor, Lenox,
and Tilden foundations, those of the New York and Long Island His-
torical Societies, and of the Bar Association are, under certain con-
ditions, also accessible to students. Fuller information as to courses
and opportunities for historical work is given in the Announcement of
the Division of History, Economics, and Public Law, which may be
obtained by applying to the Secretary of the University. Under the
auspices of the Academy of Political Science, to which advanced stu-
dents are eligible as members, opportunities are given for the discus-
sion of questions of interest as presented in papers by specialists.
The department employs in its work the best French and German
historical maps and one of the four largest relief globes ever made.
Hospital Economics
Two courses in Hospital Economics are offered under the auspices
of Teachers College. For details see the Announcement of Teachers
College and the special Hospital Economics Announcement.
See also Botany and Zoology, pages 53 and 150 respectively.
1 Given at the Union Theological Seminary.
ioo LATIN
Latin
Harry Thurston Peck, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D Anthon Professor
James C. Egbert, Ph.D Professor
Nelson G. McCrea, Ph.D Professor
Gonzalez Lodge, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Latin and Greek in
Teachers College
Charles Knapp, Ph.D Professor of Classical Philology in
Barnard College
George N. Olcott, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Gertrude Mary Hirst, Ph.D Instructor in Classical Philology in
Barnard College
Theodore Leslie Shear, Ph.D Tutor in Classical Philology in
Barnard College
Edgar Howard Sturtevant, Ph.D Tutor in Classical Philology
in Barnard College
Dino Bigongiari, A.B Lecturer
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
A i-A 2 — First half-year: Livy, xxi-xxii. Second half-year: Odes
and Epodes of Horace. 3 hours. Professors Peck, Egbert, McCrea,
and Olcott, and Mr. Bigongiari
1-2 — Tacitus: The Annals (Books i-iii). Horace: Satires. 3 hours
Professor Olcott
3-4 — First half-year: Cicero's Letters. Second half-year: Pliny's
Letters. 2 hours. Professor McCrea
[5-6 — Juvenal and Martial. 2 hours. Professor Egbert]
[7-8— Terence : Andria and Adelphoe. Plautus: Amphitruo and
Captivi. 2 hours. Professor McCrea]
9-10 — Terence: Andria and Heautontimormnenos. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Peck
11-12 — Prose composition. 1 hour. Professor Egbert
15-16 — Prose composition. 1 hour. Professor McCrea
[103-104 — Rapid reading of Horace and Ovid. 2 hours. Professor
Peck]
105-106 — Lectures on the history of Greek and Roman prose fic-
tion. 2 hours. Professor Peck
[107-108 — Roman history. Tacitus, Annals xi-xvi. 3 hours.
Professor Egbert]
[ioq-iio — Lectures on the sources of Roman history. 2 hours.
Professor Egbert]
ni-112 — Lucretius (i-iii and v). 3 hours. Professor McCrea
LATIN IOI
[113-1 14— Selections from Apuleius (The Asinus Aureus). 2 hours.
Professor Peck]
[115-116 — Roman oratory: Cicero's Verrine Orations. 2 hours.
Professor McCrea]
[117-118 — Roman oratory. Cicero : De Oratore, Pro Milone, Philip-
pica it., Pro Cluenlio. 3 hours. Professor McCrea]
1 19-120 — Latin prose composition (advanced course). 1 hour, to
count as 2 hours. Professor McCrea
[121-122 — The Cena Trimalchionis of Petronius. 2 hours. Profes-
sor Peck]
[123-124 — The history of classical philology. Lectures. 2 hours.
Professor Peck]
[125-126 — Roman tragedy. The Fragments and Seneca. 3 hours.
Professor Knapp]
[127-128 — Plautus: The Mostellaria. Seneca: The Medea. 3 hours.
Professor Peck]
151-152 — Roman epigraphy (introductory course). 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Egbert
155-156 — Private life of the Romans. Lectures and readings. 2
hours. Professor Olcott
[175-176 — The topography and monuments of ancient Rome.
The kingly and republican periods to b.c 31. 2 hours. Professor
Olcott]
[177-178 — The topography and environment of ancient Rome.
"The Empire." 2 hours. Professor Olcott]
[201-202— The history of Latin syntax. 2 hours. Professor Lodge]
[205-206 — Roman lyric and elegiac poetry. 3 hours. Professor
McCrea]
[207-208 — Latin manuscripts. 1 hour. Professor Egbert]
209-210 — Roman satire in its historical development. 3 hours.
Professor Egbert
215-216 — Roman epic poetry. 3 hours. Professor Knapp
[217-218 — Roman philosophy. Lectures, with a careful reading of
Cicero's De Officiis and Tusculantz. 3 hours. Professor Peck]
[219-220 — Latin literature. Period of the Republic. 2 hours.
Professor Peck]
[221-222 — Latin literature. Period of the Empire. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Peck]
223-224 — The Italic dialects — Umbrian, Osco-Sabellian, Faliscan.
1 hour. Professor Olcott
[227-228 — Latin versification. Theory and practice. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Peck]
102 LATIN
257-258 — Roman epigraphy (advanced course) . 2 hours. Professor
Olcott
261-262 — Introduction to the study of Roman numismatics. 1
hour. Professor Olcott
[269 — Roman archaeology. Lectures. 2 hours, first half-year. Pro-
fessor Egbert]
[270-271 — The historical development of the Latin language. 2
hours. Professor Peck]
Classical Proseminar
Lectures on the principles and methods of classical study, with
Greek and Latin bibliography. 2 hours. Professors Peck and Perry
Classical Seminar
Latin section: Latin literature of the early Empire. One session
of two hours every other week throughout the year. Professor Peck
Attendance is obligatory upon candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
and is strongly recommended to those for the Master's degree whose major subject
lies in this department.
Courses in Barnard College
A1-A2 — First half-year: Horace, Odes (selections); Roman Life and
Thought (lectures and readings). Second half-year: Vergil, Eclogues,
Ovid (selections); Roman Life and Thought. 3 hours. Professor
Knapp and Dr. Shear
B1-B2 — First half-year : Cicero, De Senectute and Be Amicitia; prose
composition. Second half-year: Livy, xxi-xxii (selections); prose
composition. 3 hours. Professor Knapp and Dr. Sturtevant
1-2 — First half-year: Catullus, Tibullus, and Propertius. Second
half-year: Juvenal and Martial. 2 hours. Dr. Hirst and Dr. Stur-
tevant
3-4 — First half-year: Pliny, Epistles (selections). Second half-
year: Tacitus, Annals, i-vi (selections). 3 hours. Dr. Sturtevant
and Dr. Hirst.
5-6 — First half-year: Cicero, Tusculan Disputations. Second half-
year: Lucretius (selections). 3 hours. Professor Knapp and Dr.
Hirst
<7_8 — First half-year: Terence, Andria and Phormio. Second half-
year: Plautus, Rudens and Menachmi. 2 hours. Professor Knapp
9-10 — Latin literature (lectures and required reading). 2 hours.
Professor Knapp
13-14 — Elementary Latin prose composition. 1 hour. Professor
Knapp
15-16 — Intermediate Latin prose composition. 1 hour. Dr. Hirst
LAW 103
17-18 — Advanced Latin prose composition. 1 hour. Dr. Hirst
19-20 — Roman Life and Thought. 1 hour. Professor Knapp
Courses in Teachers College
Education 175-176 — The teaching of Latin in secondary schools. 3
hours. Professor Lodge
Education 275-276 — Practicum in Latin. — Caesar and Vergil. 2
hours. Professor Lodge
Latin 51-52 — Latin readings. 3 hours. Professor Lodge
101-102 — Latin readings. Advanced. 2 hours. Professor Lodge
LAW
Municipal or Private Law
George W. Kirchwey, A.B Kent Professor
Francis M. Burdick:, LL.D Dwight Professor
George F. Canfield, A.M., LL.B Professor
Henry S. Redfield, A.M., LL.D Nash Professor
Charles Thaddeus Terry, A.B., LL.B Professor
Nathan Abbott, A.B., LL.B Professor
Harry Alonzo Cushing, Ph.D., LL.B Professor
Rudolf Leonhard, Dr.Jur Kaiser Wilhelm Professor
John C. Gray, LL.D Carpentier Lecturer
Goldthwaite H. Dorr, A.B., LL.B Lecturer
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
101-102 — Contracts. 4 hours. Professor Terry
103 — Criminal law. 3 hours. Professor Cushing
104 — Equity I. 3 hours. Professor Abbott
I05 — Elements of law. 3 hours. Professor Munroe Smith
I06 — Pleading I. 3 hours. Professor Redfield
107-108 — Property I. 2 hours. Professor Kirchwey
109-110 — Torts. 2 hours. Professor Burdick
204 — Admiralty. 2 hours. Mr. Dorr
201 — Agency. 3 hours. Professor Cushing
202 — Bailments. 3 hours. Mr. Dorr
206 — Bankruptcy. 2 hours. Professor Cushing
[203 — Damages. 2 hours]
[205 — Domestic relations. 2 hours. Professor Abbott]
207-208 — Equity II. 2 hours. Professor Abbott
[211 — Insurance. 2 hours]
104 PUBLIC LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE
209-210 — Negotiable paper. 2 hours. Professor Burdick
213-214 — Pleading II. 2 hours. Professor Redfield
215-216 — Property II. 2 hours. Professor Kirchwey
217 — Quasi contracts. 3 hours. Professor Cushing
219-220 — Sales. 2 hours. Professor Burdick
221-222 — Corporations. 2 hours. Professor Canfield
223-224 — Equity III. 2 hours. Professor Abbott
225-226 — Evidence. 2 hours. Professor Kirchwey
227 — Mortgages. 3 hours. Professor Cushing
228 — New York trusts. 2 hours. Professor Canfield
229-230 — Partnership. 2 hours. Professor Burdick
231 — Pleading III. 3 hours. Professor Redfield
233-234 — Property III. 2 hours. Professor Abbott
[235 — Receivers. 2 hours]
[232 — Suretyship. 2 hours]
236 — Wills. 3 hours. Professor Redfield
Public Law and Jurisprudence
John William Burgess, Ph.D., LL.D Ruggles Professor
Munroe Smith, J.U.D., LL.D Professor
1 Frank Johnson Goodnow, LL.D Eaton Professor
John Bassett Moore, LL.D Hamilton Fish Professor
The courses in this department fall into two divisions: public law
and jurisprudence. The purpose of the courses in public law is to
give a complete general view of international, constitutional, and
administrative law. They serve primarily to supplement the courses
in the Departments of History and Economics, and to give with them
a complete system of political science. In the second place, they
supplement the courses offered by the Faculty of the School of Law,
constituting with these a well-rounded legal curriculum. The courses
in international, constitutional, and administrative law are also recom-
mended to journalists, students of philosophy and theology, and in
general to all who desire to understand the organization and working
of governmental systems. The courses on private rights under the
Constitution of the United States, on the law of taxation, on the law
of municipal corporations, and on conflict of laws are more profes-
sional in their character, and are chiefly intended for law students.
The courses in Roman law and" comparative jurisprudence, while
constituting an integral portion of a complete legal education, will be
found useful to all those who desire a general comprehension of the
principles of private law rather than a professional training in its de-
1 Absent on leave
PUBLIC LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE 105
tails. The introductory course upon the Elements of Law (161), that
upon the Roman law (263-264), and that upon European legal history
(265-266) are especially recommended to students of history, eco-
nomics, and philosophy.
For information as to the Theodore Roosevelt Professorship see
page 32.
For the significance of course numbers see page 41
Courses in Public Law
A — Constitutional Law
201-202 — Comparative constitutional law of the principal modern
states — Lectures. 2 hours. Professor Burgess
203-204 — Private rights and immunities under the Constitution of
the United States — Discussion of cases. 2 hours. Professor Burgess
101-102 — American constitutional law in its historical development
— Lectures. 2 hours. (Identical with History 169-170) Professor
Burgess
319-320 — Advanced seminar in constitutional law — Investigation
and discussion. 1 hour. Professor Burgess
The courses in the constitutional history of Europe and England (cf . courses
in history) are regarded as a necessary introduction to the above courses in con-
stitutional law.
B — International Law
221 — History of diplomacy — Lectures. 2 hours. Professor Moore
120 — History of American diplomacy — Lectures. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Moore
223-224 — International law — Lectures. 2 hours. Professor Moore
337-338 — Seminar in international law. 2 hours. Professor Moore
C — Administrative Law
242 — Law of officers (extraordinary legal remedies). 2 hours. Mr.
Powell
246 — Law of taxation — Lectures and discussion of cases. 2 hours.
Mr. Powell
245 — Law of municipal corporations — Lectures and discussion of
cases. 2 hours. Mr. Powell
Courses in Roman Law and Comparative Jurisprudence
161 — Elements of Law — Lectures and assigned reading. 3 hours.
Professor Munroe Smith
263-264 — Roman Law — Lectures, assigned reading, and discussion
of cases. 2 hours. Professor Leonhard and Professor Munroe
Smith
106 MATHEMATICS
265-266 — History of European law (early German law; Frankish
law; feudalism; the canon law; the law merchant; the reception of
the Roman civil law; the modern civil codes) — Lectures. 2 hours.
Professor Munroe Smith
268 — Modern civil law of western Europe: Introduction to the
private law of France, Italy, Spain, and Germany — Lectures. 3 hours.
Professor Munroe Smith
269-270 — Conflict of laws — Lectures and discussion of cases. 1
hour. Professor Moore
[377-378 — Seminar in legal history and comparative legislation. 1
hour. Professor Leonhard and Professor Munroe Smith]
379-38o — Advanced seminar in comparative jurisprudence. 1
hour. Professor Munroe Smith
Politics
Charles Austin Beard, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Courses
1-2 — American government. 3 hours. Professor Beard
3 — American political parties. 3 hours. Professor Beard
4 — Comparative politics. 3 hours. Professor Beard
Materia Medica
(See page 128.)
Manual Training
(See Shop Work, page 148.)
Mathematics
J. Howard Van Amringe, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D Professor
Thomas Scott Fiske, Ph.D Professor
Frank Nelson Cole, Ph.D Professor
Charles Earle Bikle, A.M Adjunct Professor
James Maclay, Ph.D Professor
David Eugene Smith, Ph.D Professor
Cassius Jackson Keyser, Ph.D Adrain Professor
Henry Bedinger Mitchell, E.E., A.M Adjunct Professor
Edward Kasner, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
George Herbert Ling, Ph.D Instructor
Arthur Ray Maxson, A.M Tutor
MATHEMATICS 1 07
Lewis Parker Siceloff, A.M Tutor
William C. Krathwohl, A.B Tutor
George Wilber Hartwell, A.M . . .Lecturer
Harry Wilfred Reddick, A.M Assistant
Charles A. Isaacs, A.B Assistant
Courses
For the significance of course numbers, see -page 41
A' — Algebra. 2 hours, first half-year. Professors Maclay and
Mitchell, Dr. Ling, Mr. Maxson, Mr. Siceloff, and Mr. Hartwell
A1 — Geometry. 2 hours, first half-year. Professor Mitchell, Dr.
Ling, Mr. Maxson, Mr. Siceloff, and Mr. Hartwell
A' — Trigonometry. 2 hours, second half-year. Professor Mitchell,
Dr. Ling, Mr. Maxson, Mr. Siceloff, and Mr. Hartwell
2 — Trigonometry — Spherical trigonometry with applications. 2
hours. Professor Mitchell, Mr. Maxson, Mr. Siceloff, and Mr.
Hartwell
3-4 — Analytical geometry. 3 hours. Professors Keyser and
Mitchell, Dr. Ling, Mr. Maxson, Mr. Siceloff, and Mr. Hartwell
5-6 — Differential and integral calculus. 3 hours. Professors Van
Amringe, Maclay, and Keyser
[7 — Projective geometry. 3 hours. Dr. Ling]
9 — Solid analytical geometry. 3 hours. Mr. Maxson
11 — Higher algebra. 3 hours. Mr. Siceloff
12 — Mathematics of statistics. 3 hours. Dr. Ling
101-102 — Modern theories in geometry. 3 hours. Professor
Keyser
103-104 — Application of the calculus to the theory of surfaces and
curves in space. 3 hours. Professor Maclay
[105 — Theory of numbers. 3 hours. Dr. Ling]
107 — Vector analysis. 3 hours. Professor Mitchell
[109-1 10 — Elements of quaternions. 2 hours. Professor Mitchell]
111-112 — Modern higher algebra. 3 hours. Dr. Ling
113-114 — Differential equations. 2 hours. Professor Mitchell
[15 1 -1 52 — History of mathematics. 2 hours. Professor Smith]
[201-202 — Advanced calculus — Introduction to the theory of func-
tions of a real variable. 3 hours. Professor Fiske]
203-204 — Theory of functions of a complex variable. 3 hours
Professor Maclay
108 MATHEMATICS
[205-206 — -Introduction to the theory of functions. 3 hours.
Professor Cole]
207-208 — Theory of groups. 3 hours. Professor Cole
[209-210 — Functions defined by linear differential equations. 3
hours. Professor Fiske]
211-212 — The general theory of assemblages. 3 hours. Professor
Keyser
213-214 — Theory of invariants. 3 hours. Professor Cole
[216 — -Advanced theory of numbers. 3 hours. Dr. Ling]
[217-218 — The application of the calculus to the theory of surfaces.
3 hours. Professor Maclay]
219-220 — Differential equations and continuous groups. 2 hours.
Dr. Kasner
[221-222 — Theory of plane curves. 3 hours. Professor Cole]
[223-224 — The principles of mathematics. 3 hours. Professor
Keyser]
[225-226 — Partial differential equations. 2 hours. Professor
Kasner]
[227-228 — Elliptic functions. 3 hours. Professor Maclay]
Courses Given Separately at Barnard College
Course A1- A2 is given by Dr. Kasner and Mr. Krathwohl. Courses
in Analytical Geometry (No. 21, 3 hours), in Elementary Calculus (No.
22, 3 hours), in Differential Equations (Nos. 29-30), and in the Funda-
mental Concepts of Modern Mathematics (Nos. 33-34, 3 hours), by
Professor Kasner
Courses in the Theory of Equations (Nos. 23-24, 3 hours), and in Pro-
jective Geometry (Nos. 27-28, 3 hours), Advanced Analytical Geometry
(Nos. 31-32, 3 hours), by Mr. Krathwohl; and in Calculus (Nos.
5-6, 3 hours), by Professor Cole
Equipment
In connection with the Department of Mathematics and in addition
to the regular library facilities there is a large and fully equipped
reading-room, 501 Fayerweather, in which are available the current
numbers of over one hundred and fifty mathematical journals and
periodicals, including nearly every mathematical journal of standing
published.
The Department has, within the year, secured complete sets of the
Wiener and Schilling collections of models, thereby greatly enriching
the collection of mathematical models and charts heretofore in its
possession. To make this material equipment available for study and
inspection, room 503 Fayerweather has been fitted with glass cases
MECHANICAL EXGIXEERING 109
to receive and exhibit the models. It has also been provided with
drawing facilities, making it a mathematical model and laboratory
room.
Teachers College is well supplied with models and apparatus for use
in teaching mathematics in all grades, from the kindergarten through
the high school, together with various instruments for mechanical
computation including the latest form of De Colmar arithmometer.
For work in the history of mathematics a large collection of stereopticon
slides has been prepared, illustrating many of the most interesting
manuscripts and early books on mathematical subjects.
Mechanical Engineering
Charles E. Lucre, M.S., Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Walter Rautexstrauch, M.S Adjunct Professor
Harry L. Parr, A.B., Mech.E Instructor
Edward J. Kunze, B.S., M.E Tutor
Edward D. Thurstox, Jr., A.B., Mech.E Assistant
Courses
See also preliminary paragraplts, page 41
11-12 — Steam Power Machinery — Steam-engines and their mech-
anisms. I hour. Professor Lucre
13 — The steam-engine and its accessories — Steam Power Machin-
ery continued. 2 hours. Professor Lucre
14 — The steam-boiler and its accessories — Steam Power Machin-
ery concluded. 2 hours. Professor Lucre
IS — Valve-gearing for engines. 1 hour, and afternoon work in
draughting-room. Professor Rautexstrauch
17-18 — Applied Thermodynamics. 1 hour. Professor Lucre
19-20 — Steam-engine design. 2 hours, with afternoon work in
drawing-room. Professor Rautexstrauch
21-22C — Principles and design of the gas engine. 3 hours and one
afternoon, first half-year; 2 hours and 1 afternoon, second half-year.
Professor Lucre
25-26 — Power plant layout and specification. 2 hours and 1 after-
noon, first half-year, and 1 hour and 1 afternoon, second half-year.
Professor Lucre
31-32 — Experimental mechanical engineering. Laboratory meth-
ods. Calibration. Solution of problems. 1 hour and one afternoon.
Professor Lucre, Mr. Parr, and Mr. Thurstox
33 — Experimental mechanical engineering — Continuation of Course
31-32. 2 hours lecture and one afternoon. Professor Lucre, Mr.
Parr, and Mr. Thurstox
no MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
35-36 — Kinematics. 2 hours. Professor Rautenstrauch and Mr.
Kunze
37 — Mechanics of materials. 4 hours. Professor Rautenstrauch
39-40 — Principles of Machine Design. 1 hour and r afternoon,
first half-year; 2 hours, second half-year. Professor Rautenstrauch
and Mr. Kunze
41-42 — Design of Special Machinery. 1 afternoon, first half-year;
4 afternoons, second half-year. Professor Rautenstrauch and Mr.
Kunze
46 — Hydraulic machinery. 3 hours. Mr. Kunze
52 — Works management. 2 hours. Professor Rautenstrauch
69 — Steam Power Machinery. 1 hour. Mr. Parr
71 — Heat and its applications. 3 hours. Professor Lucke
76 — Experimental mechanical engineering — Selections from 31-32.
Lecture and laboratory. Professor Lucre, Mr. Parr, and Mr. Thurs-
ton
77 — Continuation of 76. Professor Lucre, Mr. Parr, and Mr.
Thurston
92s — Shop Practice — Memoir on first summer work. Professor
Rautenstrauch
94s — Drafting Room Practice — Memoir on second summer work.
Professor Rautenstrauch
96s — Power Plant Practice — Memoir on third summer work. Pro-
fessor Lucke
99 — Graduation thesis. Professor Lucke
201-202 — Specialproblems and original investigations in advanced
mechanical engineering. Professor Lucke
203-204 — ^Mechanics of the steam turbine. Professor Lucke
205-206 — Vibration in machines. Professor Lucke
Equipment.
This department is well equipped with offices for the usual work
and for student conferences; lecture-rooms of various sizes ; valuable col-
lections of models and specimens to illustrate the lectures; and draught-
ing-rooms provided with large numbers of blue prints, photographs,
and catalogues of standard and special machinery supplied by manu-
facturers, but the departmental equipment is chiefly remarkable in
the excellent facilities available for the prosecution of experimental
work, both for undergraduate students and graduate research. This
experimental equipment includes all the standard and many special
forms of measuring instruments, means for their calibration, and an
unusually large collection of full-size standard machinery, covering
practically every important class. This equipment is valued at ap-
METALLURGY III
proximately SSo.ooo.oo, and the experimental laboratories, in which
it is maintained, cover a floor space of approximately 10,000 sq. ft.
Further details of this equipment are given in the departmental an-
nouncement.
Metallurgy
Henry M. Howe, A.M., B.S., LL.D Professor
Bradley Stoughton, Ph.B., B.S Adjunct Professor
William Campbell, Ph.D., D.Sc Adjunct Professor
Edward F. Kern, Ph.D Tutor
Cornelis Offerhaus. Ph.D Assistant
Courses
See introductory paragraphs, page 41
1 — Metallurgy of copper. 2 hours. Dr. Kern
2a — Electrometallurgy. 2 hours lectures for six weeks. Dr. Kern
2b — Metallurgy of fuels steel and iron — Shorter course. 2 hours
lectures for nine weeks. Professor Stoughton
3 — Metallurgy of lead, silver, gold, zinc, and minor metals. 3 hours
lectures. Professor Campbell
4 — Metallurgy of iron and steel — Longer course. 2 hours lectures
Professor Stoughton
71-72 — Laboratory work — Shorter course. 10 afternoons in all.
Professor Campbell, Dr. Kern, and Assistant
171-172 — Laboratory work — Longer course. 4 afternoons. Pro-
fessor Campbell, Dr. Kern, and Assistant
176 — The art of metallurgical investigation. 10 afternoons con-
ference. Professor Stoughton
62 S — Summer course in non-ferrous metallurgy. Professor Camp-
bell or Dr. Kern and Assistant
64 S — Summer course in iron and steel. Professor Stoughton and
Assistants
62-64 — Two courses of three weeks each are given at metallurgical
works in studying the operations there carried out. The students are
given individual and class instruction and are required to make com-
plete descriptions of the various processes, including sketches of
furnaces and apparatus.
51 — Extension of Metallurgy 1. 1 hour conference. Dr. Kern
52 — Extension of Metallurgy 2 a. 1 hour conference for six weeks.
Dr. Kern
53 — Extension of Metallurgy 3. 1 hour conference. Professor
Campbell
H2 METALLURGY
54 — Extension of Metallurgy 4. 2 hours conference. Professor
Stoughton
56 — Metallurgy of alloys. 3 hours conference for nine weeks.
Professor Campbell
58 — Metallography of iron, steel, and industrial alloys. Total of
3 lectures and 3 or more afternoons laboratory. Professor Campbell
201-202 — Special courses in pyrometry, the microstructure of met-
als and alloys, the chemistry of roasting processes, etc., consisting of
personal instruction and original experimental investigation, will
be arranged for advanced students, either at metallurgical works
into processes in actual use there, or in the metallurgical and ana-
lytical laboratories of the department. Professor Campbell and Dr.
Kern
Metallurgical Excursions — During the term the students see, at
the metallurgical works near the city, iron blast furnaces, Bessemer
and open-hearth steel making, lead and copper smelting, copper
Bessemerizing and refining by furnace and electrolytic methods, the
desilverizing of base bullion, and the parting and refining of gold and
silver by electrolytic and acid methods.
Equipment
Lecture Diagrams — There are very many large lecture diagrams,
showing the various metallurgical appliances, and the sequence of
metallurgical processes, besides many models, drawings, and apparatus
for lecture demonstrations — for instance, in the heat-treatment
and rolling of metals and in wet processes.
Metallurgical Collection — There is a collection of about 3000
specimens of ores, metals, and metallurgical products, and a rapidly
forming collection of microscopic sections and photomicrographs of
metals and alloys.
Analytical Laboratory — The department has an analytical
laboratory open to the students in Metallurgy.
Metallurgical Laboratory — 1. Instruments of Precision of
Metallurgy — There are enough Le Chatelier thermo-electric pyrometers
to give each student the exclusive use of one throughout his course,
and many others of various kinds, some of great precision, some with
autographic attachments, etc.
For the microscopic study of metals there are many special micro-
scopes, with appliances for polishing, sclerometers, a drop-testing
machine, a Fremont drop-testing machine, special testing machines for
metals, ammeters, etc.
2. For Analytical Metallurgy, or the study of the principles and
reactions of metallurgy taken singly as distinguished from the several
industrial processes each taken as a unit, there are many special
MINERALOGY 1 13
furnaces heated by electricity or gas, a small power-driven roll-train,
etc.
3. For Applied Metallurgy there are, besides the common furnaces
special crucible melting furnaces, muffles, etc., a cupola furnace, an
English cupelling furnace, two small reverberatory roasting furnaces,
a set of lixiviating and precipitating vats, amalgamating pans, kettles
for desilverizing lead, a chlorinating barrel, storage batteries, volt-
meters and ammeters for electrolysis, and a working stock of ores,
refractory materials, fluxes, alloys, iron, and of very many varieties
of steel.
4. Advanced Students — The laboratory gives advanced students
and practitioners unusual advantages for investigating accurately
the scientific and many of the economic problems of metallurgy.
Metallurgical Library — The Metallurgical Department has its
own metallurgical library, about sixteen hundred volumes.
Mineralogy
Alfred J. Moses, E.M., Ph.D Professor
Lea McI. Luquer, C.E., Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Maurice A. Lamme, B.S., A.M Tutor
Charles Arthur Stewart, A.M Assistant
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
1-2 — Descriptive and determinative mineralogy. C 3 hours, L
2 afternoons. Professors Moses and Luquer, Mr. Lamme, and Mr.
Stewart
3-4 — General mineralogy — C 2 hours, L 1 afternoon. Professor
Moses
5 — The minerals of building-stones and the common ores. C 2
hours, and L 1 afternoon. Professor Luquer and Assistant
6 — Optical mineralogy — Minerals in rock sections. L 2 afternoons for
two months. Professor Luquer and Assistant-
7-8 — Mineralogy and crystallography. C 3 hours, L 2 afternoons.
Professors Moses and Luquer, Mr. Lamme, and Mr. Stewart
15-16 — Mineralogy — Minerals important in the chemical industries.
L 1 afternoon. Professor Moses and Assistant
207-208 — Optical mineralogy. C 1 hour, L 1 afternoon. Professor
Luquer
209-210 — Physical crystallography. C 1 hour, L 1 afternoon.
Professor Moses
21 1-2 1 2 — Mineralogy — Study of assigned subject. 12 hours for
two years. Professor Moses
114 MINING
Equipment
The work of the students in the college courses "and in general min-
eralogy is performed in the lecture-room, in the blowpipe laboratory
and in the adjoining conference-room, in which are the student collec-
tions of crystal models and minerals and several thousand unlabelled
specimens used in determinative work. The department possesses also
about 1 200 sections of minerals and rocks, and 1500 crystal models in
wood and glass. Students in optical mineralogy use a separate room
with north light, and for crystal measurements and monochromatic-
light determinations there is provided a large dark-room.
The Egleston Mineralogical Museum contains about 30,000 labelled
specimens, and includes a systematic collection, an economic collec-
tion of ores, building materials, and minerals used in chemical indus-
tries, a collection illustrating the genesis and alteration of minerals,
a collection illustrating the characters of minerals, and small collec-
tions of artificial minerals and New York City minerals.
Mining
Henry S. Munroe, E.M., Ph.D., Sc.D Professor
Robert Peele, E.M Professor
Edward L. Kurtz, E.M Instructor
Walter R. Crane, Ph.D Instructor
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
51 — Excavation and tunnelling. 3 hours. Professor Peele
52 — Boring and shaft-sinking. 3 hours for 3 months. Professor
Peele
54 — Prospecting, exploration, development, and methods of work-
ing. 3 hours. Professor Munroe
55 — Mine surveying, sampling, and valuation. 1 hour. Professor
Munroe
56 — Mine engineering. Surface handling and transportation; trans-
shipment and storage of minerals. Drainage. Water supply. Venti-
lation. Accidents. 2 hours. Professor Munroe
170 — Mine constructions. Building materials, retaining walls,
trestles, ore-bins, etc. 1 hour. Professor Peele
•72-172 — Mine plant. Hoisting, drainage, ventilating and com-
pressed-air plant, machine drills, coal cutters, and underground
handling and haulage. 3 hours. Professor Peele
75 — Design of mine plant. Working drawings of specified portions
of mine plant, made under supervision and advice in connection with
graduating project. 5 afternoons. Professor Peele, Mr. Kurtz,
and Dr. Crane
MINING 115
80 — Mill constructions. 1 hour. Mr. Kurtz
81-82 — Ore dressing, gold milling, and the mechanical preparation
of coal. 3 hours for 5 months. Professor Munroe
82a — Ore-dressing laboratory. Working tests. Adjustment, opera-
tion, and sampling of concentrating machines. Afternoon work for
three weeks. Professor Munroe, Mr. Kurtz, and Dr. Crane
91-92 — Administration, organization, and business management.
1 hour. Professor Munroe and Mr. Kurtz
94 — Mining law. 1 hour. Mr. Kurtz
95 — Mining practice, conference. 1 hour. Dr. Crane
99-100 — Graduating thesis or project. Professor Peele
Summer Course
59s — The summer course of practical mining is held in June and July,
in the vacation between the third and fourth years, and lasts six weeks-
Professor Peele, Mr. Kurtz, and Dr. Crane
The course of instruction includes four weeks' detailed study of the
plant and methods of working at some important mine or mines
selected for the purpose; one week mine surveying; and one week or
more excursion to other mines and mining regions. Arrangements are
also made at other mines, by which students in small groups may sub-
stitute, for the above, independent study under the general direction
of the department.
Graduate Courses
Special courses, consisting of personal instruction, reading, and ex-
perimental investigation, will be arranged for advanced students ac-
cording to their individual needs and ability. These investigations
will be made at mines and dressing works, either in connection with
the summer school or elsewhere as assigned, with additional work, as
required, in the library and in the laboratories of the department .
These courses vary in difficulty and in the amount of time necessary,
according as the student is a candidate for the degree of A.M. or Ph.D.,
and according as he pursues mining as a major or a minor subject.
The time required is governed by the rule that a course or courses
should occupy about 18 hours a week (outside reading and study in-
cluded) if taken as a major subject, and about 9 hours a week if taken
as a minor subject. The following are suggested:
101-102 — Mining and ore dressing — Mining 54, 81-82, and 82a. 4
hours, with laboratory work and reading as required.
103-104 — Mining engineering — -Mining 56, 71-72, and 91-92. 4
hours lectures and reading as required.
105-106 — Design of mine plant — Mining 70, 71, 72, 75, 99, and 100.
3 hours and 5 afternoons draughting-room work.
Il6 MIXING
107-108 — Design of ore-dressing works — Mining 80, 81, 82, and 82a,
with 1 hour conference additional. 3 hours and 5 afternoons labora-
tory and draughting-room work.
109-110— Mining— 51, 52, 54, 55, 56, 59, 70, 71-72, 75, 80, 81-82,
82a, 91-92, 93, 94, 95, 99 and 100 being all the undergraduate
courses in the Department of Mining.
201-202 — Methods of mining — Critical study of methods used in
some mining region, or for a certain class of deposits.
203-204 — Mining plant — Critical study of rock drilling, or coal
cutting, or hoisting, or haulage, or ventilating plant at some mine or
mines.
205-206 — Deep mining — Study of problems involved.
207-208 — Ore dressing — Critical study of some detail of the ordinary
dressing methods.
209-210 — Examination of a coal -washing plant, or an ore-dressing
plant — 4 to 6 weeks' work in the mill and in the laboratory, with con-
ferences.
21 is — Examination of a mineral property, or a mine — 4 to 6 weeks
devoted to field and underground work, with conferences at conven-
ience of professor.
213-214 — Economic studies in mining — Study of existing conditions
affecting the production and cost of some mineral or metal.
1 215 — Mining, conference and reading. 1 hour. Professor Munroe
Equipment
Lecture Illustrations — The lectures on mining are illustrated by
5 sets of books aggregating over 300 volumes, and containing 85,000
blue prints from negatives made for the purpose. There are a suffi-
cient number of these books, illustrating the different courses of
lectures, so that each student has the use of one or more for reference
during the lectures and for home study. These blue prints have many
advantages over the usual form of lecture illustrations by lantern
slides or wall diagrams. The latter are, however, used when neces-
sary to supplement the blue prints.
Mining Library — The University Library contains sets of the trans-
actions of all mining, metallurgical, and engineering societies, and of
the more important periodical publications on these subjects. There
is also a large collection of books on mining, and all new publications of
value are added as they appear. In addition, a small departmental
reference library has been created, which is accessible to students at
all times.
Mining Museum — The subject of mining is illustrated by collections
as follows: Maps of coal and metal mines of this and other countries.
MUSIC 117
Working drawings, diagrams, and photographs of mine plant, and of
mining and dressing machinery. Models of mines and parts of mines
and of mine plant. Mining tools: picks, shovels, hammers, drills,
blasting apparatus, lamps, safety-lamps, anemometers, and machine
drills. Ores and dressing products from typical works in this and other
countries. Surveying instruments: geological compasses and clino-
meters, attraction compasses, dipping needles, hanging compasses and
arcs, transits, lamp signals, rods, and apparatus for plumbing and
measuring shafts.
Mining Laboratories — The basement and sub-basement of the
School of Mines are equipped as laboratories for the department of
mining. These laboratories serve four purposes: 1. To illustrate the
physical laws bearing on mineral separation. 2. To afford opportunity
for quantitative working tests. 3. To train students in the adjust-
ment and operation of concentrating machinery, and in the making
of efficiency tests under working conditions. 4. To give advanced
students and others all necessary facilities for original investigation.
Mines and Dressing Works — Many coal, iron, and other mines,
slate and stone quarries, and metallurgical works are easily accessible.
Within a radius of one hundred miles of New York City may be
studied numerous examples of the best practice in mining and metal-
lurgy under most varied conditions, and some of the most modern and
effective mining and dressing machinery and smelting plants in the
country. The excursions of the summer class in mining extend as
far as the iron, copper, zinc, lead, silver, and gold regions of Michigan,
Missouri, Montana, Colorado, Arizona, Utah, and California.
The metropolitan situation of the school renders it possible to pre-
sent, also, as parts of the regular courses in mining, special lectures by
prominent engineers. The list of such lecturers for 1906-07 and more
detailed information as to the courses offered and as to the facilities
for instruction will be found in the Announcement of the School of
Mines and associated schools, 1907-08.
Music
Cornelius Rubner Professor
Leonard Beecher McWhood, A.B Adjunct Professor
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs , page 41
1-2 — General Musical Course. 1 hour. Professor McWhood
3-4 — General Musical Course, advanced. 2 hours. Professor
Rubner
5-6 — The Analysis of Musical Sound. 1 hour. Professor McWhood
7-8 — Harmony. 2 hours. Professor McWhood
Il8 NEUROLOGY
9-10 — Advanced Harmony and Practical Composition. 1 hour
Professor McWhood
11-12 — Counterpoint. 2 hours. Professor McWhood
13-14 — Free Composition. 1 hour. Professor Rubner
15-16 — Orchestration. 1 hour. Professor Rubner
25-26 — Musical Dictation. 1 hour. Professor McWhood
27-28 — Musical Dictation, advanced. 1 hour. Professor Mc-
Whood
31-32 — University Orchestra. 2 hours. Professor Rubner
33-34 — University Chorus. 1 hour. Professor Rubner
Rubner
101-102 — Free Composition, advanced, 1 hour. Professor
103-104 — Orchestration and Symphonic Form, advanced. 1 hour.
Professor Rubner
Nine courses in Teaching and Supervision of Music are offered at
Teachers College. (See the Announcement of Teachers College).
The Department of Music offers numerous concerts and recitals
to the University. These include various concerts of chamber music,
organ recitals, an annual recital of original compositions by students in
the department, and the regular concerts of the University Orchestra
and the University Chorus.
Equipment
A collection of music and of books of reference is placed at the dis-
posal of students. It includes the complete works of various com-
posers, many orchestral and opera scores, the piano-forte classics, and
vocal music, besides many theoretical, historical, and biographical
works. The department has also a collection of instruments for the
use of students participating in the University Orchestra.
Nature Study
(See Botany and Zoology)
Three courses in Nature Study and Agriculture are offered under
the auspices of Teachers College. For details see the Announcement
of Teachers College.
Neurology
M. Allen Starr, M.D., LL.D., Sc.D Professor
Frederick Peterson, M.D Professor of Psychiatry
Pearce Bailey, M.D Adjunct Professor
R. H. Cunningham, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor
E. L. Hunt, M.D Instructor
OBSTETRICS 1 19
Clinical Assistants
C. E. Atwood, M.D. E. J. McEntee , M.D.
S. P. Goodhart, M.D. J. E. Clark, M.D.
Smith Ely Jelliffe, M.D. J. L. Macumber, M.D.
L. Pierce Clark, M.D. C. F. Haviland, M.D.
H. R. Humphries, M.D. C. D. Cleghorn, M.D.
Thos. P. Prout, M.D. Edward W. Scripture, M.D.
G. W. Todd, M.D. Charles Rosenheck, M.D.
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
51-Didactic lectures with lantern demonstration on nervous
diseases, 1 hour. Professor Starr
Brain and Functional diseases, 1907. Spinal Cord and Nerves, 1908.
53-54 — Clinical lectures. 1 hour. Professor Starr
55-56 — Section teaching — Practical neurology. 10-12 lessons.
Drs. Cunningham and Hunt.
58 — Clinics on insanity. 8 hours in January and February. Prof.
Peterson
60 — Special lectures on forensic psychiatry. Professor Bailey
Obstetrics
Edwin B. Cragin, M.D Professor
Harry McM. Painter, M.D Professor of Clinical Obstetrics
James D. Voorhees, M.D Adjunct Professor
George H. McFarland, Jr., M.D Instructor
Clinical Assistants
Fellowes Davis, M.D Chief of Clinic
George H. Ryder, M.D Clinical Assistant
Ellice McDonald, M.D Clinical Assistant
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
51 — Theory and practice of obstetrics — Lectures. 3 hours, two
didactic and one clinical. Professor Cragin
53-54 — Recitations and demonstrations. 1 hour for each student,
in small sections of the class. Dr. Voorhees
55-56 — Practical instruction at the Sloane Maternity Hospital. The
class is divided into sections of six, each section remaining on duty at
the Hospital for two weeks. Dr. McFarland
120 ORIENTAL LANGUAGES
57-58 — Out-patient Service at Vanderbilt Clinic. Professor
Painter and Dr. Davis
The Sloane Maternity Hospital
The Sloane Maternity Hospital is situated upon the grounds of the
College of Physicians and Surgeons, and the service is under the exclu-
sive direction of the Professor of Obstetrics in the College, one of the
Instructors in Obstetrics being the resident physician.
The wards of the Hospital furnish one hundred and twenty-seven
beds, and there are ample accommodations for the house staff, students,
and nurses. The operating-room is equipped with all modern surgical
and obstetrical conveniences, and weekly clinics for the entire third-
year class are given here during the first half-year. The number of
deliveries averages over fifteen hundred a year. These, with the
obstetric operations and the subsequent treatment of women and
infants, afford invaluable practical experience.
Oriental Languages
CHINESE
Friedrich Hirth, Ph.D Dean Lung Professor
Berthold Laufer, Ph.D Lecturer
Courses 105-106, 107-108, 109-110, and 111 are designed for
students not wishing to become specialists.
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41.
101-102 — Elementary course in the Chinese written language. 3
hours. Professor Hirth and Dr. Laufer
201-202 — Analysis and translation of easy commercial documents
2 hours. Professor Hirth and Dr. Laufer
203-204 — Analysis and translation of selected easy literary texts.
2 hours. Professor Hirth
205-206 — Helps and keys in Chinese literature. 1 hour. Professor
Hirth
103-104 — The Mandarin dialect. 2 hours. Professor Hirth and
Dr. Laufer
105-106 — History of the Chinese Empire. 1 hour. Professor
Hirth
107-108 — Language, literature, government, art, and social life of
the Chinese. 2 hours. Professor Hirth
100-110 ( = Anthropology m-112) — Archaeology and ethnography
of China (Farther India and Central Asia). 2 hours. Dr. Laufer
1 11 (= Anthropology 113) — Ethnography of Japan, Korea, and
Formosa. 1 hour. Dr. Laufer
ORIENTAL LANGUAGES 12 1
213-214 — Elementary course in Tibetan, Manchu, or Mongolian.
1 hour. Dr. Laufer
Seminars
The Seminars are for research work and special study in three direc-
tions: (a) modern government matters; (b) historical literature; and
(c) literature on art, industry, and culture. Any two will be offered
in each academic year, according to the needs of students.
301-302 — Seminar for the study of Chinese government matters.
2 hours. Professor Hirth
303-304 — Seminar for historical studies in Chinese literature. For
Chinese and Japanese students especially: China's relations with the
Roman Empire, Central and Western Asia. 2 hours. Professor Hirth
305-306 — Seminar for the study of Chinese art, industry, and general
culture. 1 hour. Professor Hirth
Pending the completion of the collection of Chinese books now in
the course of formation in connection with the Columbia Library, Pro-
fessor Hirth's Courses and Seminars will be held in his private library,
near Columbia University, 501 W. 113th Street.
INDO-IRANIAN LANGUAGES
A. V. Williams Jackson, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D Professor
Abraham Yohannan, Ph.D Lecturer
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
101-102 — Sanskrit, elementary course. 3 hours. Professor
Jackson
[103-104 — Avestan, elementary course — Grammar and reading of
texts. 2 hours. Professor Jackson]
105-106 — Sanskrit, advanced course. The Nagananda of Harsha;
selections from Manu, with the native commentary. Introduction to
the Veda. 2 hours. Professor Jackson
107-108 — Modern Persian, introductory course. Grammar and
reading. Sa'di's Gulistan. 2 hours. Dr. Yohannan
109 — History of India and of Persia. 2 hours. Professor Jackson
Identical with History 103
201-202 — Avestan, advanced course — Interpretation of texts,
antiquities, and literature. 2 hours. Professor Jackson
203-204 — Pali, elementary course. 1 hour. Professor Jackson
[205 — Old Persian cuneiform inscriptions. 1 hour. Professor
Jackson]
122 ORIENTAL LANGUAGES
[206 — Pahlavi, introductory course. 1 hour. Professor Jackson]
207-208 — Sanskrit literature. 1 hour. Professor Jackson
209 — Zoroastrian Gathas — Reading of texts with the Pahlavi and
the Sanskrit version. 1 hour. Professor Jackson
210 — Zoroaster and Buddha and their teachings. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Jackson
211-212 — Modern Persian, second-year course. Selections from
Firdausi, Omar Khayyam, and Hafiz. 2 hours. Dr. Yohannan
Course in Armenian
213-214 — Principles of the grammar, with selected readings. 2
hours. Dr. Yohannan
Seminar
301-302 — Indo-Iranian Seminar. 1 hour. Professor Jackson
Public Lectures
A course of afternoon lectures on the literature, antiquities, and
history of ancient India and Persia, open to all students of the Uni-
versity and to auditors, is given during the winter months. Public
announcement of the subjects will be made at the time when these
lectures are to be delivered.
Courses in the Science of Language
111-112 — Introduction to the study of language. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Jackson in co-operation with the various professors giving
linguistic courses.
113-114 — Types of language — first half-year: Indo-European and
Semitic Languages. Second half-year: American and the Central and
Eastern Asiatic Languages. 2 hours. The Professors of the depart-
ments concerned.
SEMITIC LANGUAGES
Richard J. H. Gottheil, Ph.D Professor
John Dyneley Prince, Ph.D Professor
Abraham Yohannan, Ph.D Lecturer
Robert J. Lan, Ph.D Lecturer
Harold S. Davidson, Ph.D Gustav Gottheil Lecturer
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
Hebrew
101-102 — Biblical Hebrew, elementary course — Davidson's Intro-
ductory Hebrew Grammar. 2 hours. Dr. Davidson
ORIENTAL LANGUAGES 123
103 — Biblical Hebrew, second course. The book of Daniel. 2
hours. Professor Prince
104 — Biblical Hebrew, second course. Deuteronomy and Hebrew
Prose Composition. 2 hours, second half-year. Professor Gottheil
Students registering for this course must take both 103 and 104.
I05 — Biblical Hebrew, third (lecture) course. Semitic archaeology
and its bearings upon the study of the Bible. Professor Gottheil
io6 — The history of the literature of the Old Testament; Lectures
on the origin and development of Hebrew literature. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Prince
Other courses in Hebrew are given at the Union Theological
Seminary.
Courses in Rabbinical Hebrew
107-108 — Selected readings from the Mishnah. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Gottheil
100-110 — Selected readings from the Talmud, Treatise Berachoth.
2 hours. Professor Gottheil
201 — Hebrew historical works. 2 hours, first half-year. Pro-
fessor Gottheil
Epigraphy
These courses are intended to cover the whole field of Semitic
Epigraphy during a period of three years. For Course 203-204 a
previous knowledge of Hebrew is required; for Course 205-206, of
Aramaean; and for Course 207-208, of Arabic.
203-204 — Interpretation of the Phoenician inscriptions, with an
introduction to Semitic palaeography and the history of the alpha-
bet. Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum, vol. i. 1 hour. Professor
Gottheil]
[205-206 — Interpretation of the Aramaean inscriptions of Sinjirli
and of the Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum, vol. ii. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Gottheil]
207-208 — Interpretation of the Sabaean and Himyaritic inscriptions
contained in the Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum, vol. iv. 1 hour.
Professor Gottheil
Assyrian
111-112 — Assyrian elementary course — Study of the syllabary,
with readings from Assyrian narrative texts. 2 hours. Professor Prince
209-210 — Advanced course — Study of the texts in II. and IV. Raw-
linson. Sumerian studies. 2 hours. Professor Prince
211-212 — Advanced course — Sumerian lexicography. 2 hours.
Professor Prince
124 ORIENTAL LANGUAGES
Arabic
113 — Arabic elementary course — Grammar and translation. 2
hours, first half-year. Dr. Davidson
114 — Second course — Study of Briinnow's Chrestomathie aus ara-
bischen Prosaschrifstellern. 2 hours, second half-year. Dr. Davidson
215-216 — Advanced course — Selections from the Prolegomena of
Ibn Khaldun and the Sahih of al-Bukhari. 2 hours. Professor Got-
theil and Dr. Lau.
217-218 — Modern Arabic, dialect of Egypt. 2 hours. Professors
Gottheil and Prince
Syriac
115-116 — Syriac first course. Brockelmann's Syrische Grammatik
and the Acta Martyrum. 2 hours. Dr. Davidson
117-118 — Second course. Historical Texts; Modern Syriac. Pro-
fessor Gottheil and Dr. Yohannan
Ethiopic
[219-220 — Ethiopic — Principles of the grammar and reading of the
extracts in Praetorius, Altiopische Grammatik. 1 hour. Professor
Gottheil]
Oriental History
1 19 — The ancient history of Western Asia until Alexander the Great.
2 hours. Professor Prince. Identical with History 101-102
120 — The rise of Arabian civilization and the spread of Mohammed-
anism. 2 hours. Professor Gottheil. Identical with History 104
Seminar
309-310 — Semitic Seminar — Current questions in Semitic philology
and history with especial reference to modern methods of research.
2 hours. Professors Gottheil and Prince
Egyptian
[221 — Egyptian — Elementary course in Coptic. 1 hour. Professor
Prince]
[222 — Egyptian hieroglyphs and advanced Coptic. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Prince]
Turkish
123-124 — Turkish — Principles of the grammar, conversation, and
reading of newspapers. 2 hours. Dr. Yohannan
PATHOLOGY 125
Courses in Hebrew at the Union Theological Seminary
A detailed announcement of these courses is given in the Announce-
ment of the Division of Oriental Languages. Such courses may be
counted as part of the work required for the degrees of Master of
Arts and Doctor of Philosophy.
Equipment
The Columbia University Library contains most of the important
periodicals which deal with Oriental research, and has a rich collection
of the publications of the learned societies of Europe — e. g., of the
Academies of Berlin, Vienna, Leipsic, St. Petersburg, Brussels, Paris,
and Rome (Lincei).
The books relating to East Indian and Iranian subjects in the
University Library comprise already a good collection of the most
important text-editions and works of reference, and additions are
constantly being made. Most of the best works dealing with Semitic
philology will be found in the Library; care has been taken, especially
in Assyriology, to buy all the more important publications. In the
Avery Architectural Library most of the monumental works relating to
Eastern art and archaeology will be found. Through the generosity of
the trustees of Temple Emanuel, the Library now possesses the most
complete collection of works in Rabbinical Hebrew to be found in this
country. There is also a small collection of Hebrew, Arabic, and
Persian MSS., designed for the use of advanced students. The re-
sources of the University Library are supplemented in the most valu-
able way by the collections of all branches of Orientalia in the New
York Public Library. A collection of old Babylonian tablets has been
added to the department. These, together with the casts of tablets
in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, furnish material for those who
wish to devote themselves especially to the study of Babylonian and
Assyrian.
The library of the Union Theological Seminary, which is accessible
to advanced students of Columbia University, contains all the current
theological periodicals.
Pathology
T. Mitchell Prudden, M.D., LL.D Professor of Pathology
Eugene Hodenpyl, M.D Adjunct Professor of Pathological
Anatomy
John H. Larkin, M.D Adjunct Professor of Pathological Anatomy
and Curator of the Museum
Edward Leaming, M.D Instructor in Photography
Norman E. Ditman, M.D Instructor in Pathology
Karl M. Vogel, M.D Instructor in Pathology
Horst Oertel, M.D Demonstrator in Pathological Anatomy
Eugene L. Opie, M.D Demonstrator in Pathological Anatomy
126 PATHOLOGY
Close association is maintained between this department and the
departments of Clinical Pathology and Bacteriology, so as to facilitate
instruction and research in these closely allied subjects.
Courses
See also -preliminary paragraphs, page 41.
51-52 — Autopsy technique and pathological anatomy at the
Roosevelt, Presbyterian, St. Luke's, St. Francis', City, German, or
Bellevue Hospitals, twice a week for half the year. Professors Hoden-
pyl, Wood, and Larkin, and Drs. Oertel, Opie, and Ditman
54 — Practical instruction in general and special pathology, and in
the bacteriology of the infectious diseases. 10 hours for one
half of the academic year. Professors Prudden, Hodenpyl, Larkin,
and Bailey, and Drs. Ditman and Vogel
55_56 — Demonstrations in pathological anatomy. 2 hours. Pro-
fessors Hodenpyl and Larkin, and Drs. Ditman and Vogel
204 — Pathological anatomy and histology, and experimental
pathology. Professors Prudden and Hodenpyl
This course can not be counted for a degree, and is open only to
qualified graduate students by special arrangement with the head of
the department.
Photography and Photomicrography
1-2 — Practical instruction is given to a limited number of men in
the photographic laboratories of the college in the technique of pho-
tography and photomicrography. Dr. Leaming
Research
Research in pathology may be pursued in the laboratories of this
department by a limited number of graduate students or practitioners
of medicine or other advanced workers. Professor Prudden
Museum
The Museum of Pathology is made use of in the work of this depart-
ment, both for the instruction of medical students and as a place of
deposit for specimens showing new and rare forms of lesions.
Equipment
The Department of Pathology shares with the departments of
Clinical Pathology and Bacteriology the two upper floors of the north
wing of the college building. The large classroom on the upper
floor of the east wing is used for the classes in pathology, histology,
and embryology. The fourth floor is devoted to the pathological
museum and to a large preparation laboratory, a workshop, cold
PHARMACY 127
storage and the like. The remaining space is devoted to a general
laboratory and to private rooms for instructors and advanced workers
in pathology, to undergraduate and to research work in pathology,
clinical pathology, and bacteriology, and to a departmental library.
The entire space is amply lighted, fully furnished, and equipped with
such new apparatus as these rapidly growing phases of science require.
Pediatrics
(See Diseases of Children, page 71)
Pharmacy
The New York College of Pharmacy is the Division of Pharmacy
of Columbia University. In the section of the catalogue devoted to
the College of Pharmacy will be found a list of its officers and in-
formation as to the equipment and method of instruction. The
Program of Studies includes the following courses:
Junior Year
Physics — Lectures, Professor Coblentz; recitations, Professor
Oehler
General and Pharmaceutical Chemistry — Lectures, Professor
Coblentz; recitations, Professor Oehler
Analytical Chemistry — Laboratory work, Professor Vorisek
Mathematics of Pharmacy — Practical exercises, Professor Vorisek
Practical Pharmacy — Lectures and laboratory course, Professor
Diekman; recitations, Dr. Wimmer
Dispensing Pharmacy — Laboratory course, Professor Diekman and
Dr. Wimmer
Botany — Lectures, Professor Rusby; recitations, Acting Professor
Mansfield
Pharmacognosy — General laboratory course, Professor Rusby;
histological laboratory course, Acting Professor Mansfield
Physiology — Lectures, Professor Rusby; recitations, Professor
Rusby and Acting Professor Mansfield
Toxicology and Posology — Recitations, Professor Rusby
Senior Year
Organic Chemistry — Lectures, Professor Chandler; recitations,
Professor Oehler
Pharmaceutical Chemistry (inorganic and organic) — Lectures
Professor Coblentz; recitations, Professor Oehler
Analytical Chemistry — Laboratory work, Professor Vorisek
128 PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS
Practical Pharmacy — Lectures and recitations, Professor Diekman ;
laboratory course, Professor Diekman and Dr. Wimmer
Dispensing Pharmacy — Laboratory course, Professor Diekman and
Dr. Wimmer
Materia Medica — Lectures, Professor Rusby; recitations, Professor
Rusby and Acting Professor Mansfield
Toxicology — Lectures, Professor Rusby; recitations, Acting Pro-
fessor Mansfield
Commercial Pharmacognosy — Laboratory, Professor Rusby; recita-
tions, Acting Professor Mansfield
Microscopical Pharmacognosy — Laboratory course, Acting Pro-
fessor Mansfield
Graduate Courses
Plant Analysis — Laboratory, Professor Rusby
Technical Microscopy — Laboratory, Acting Professor Mansfield
Bacteriology — Laboratory course, Professor Knapp
Quantitative Analysis — Laboratory, Professor Vorisek
Organic Analysis — Laboratory, Professor Coblentz
Theory and Practice of Inorganic Quantitative Analysis — Lec-
tures. Professor Vorisek
Commercial Organic Analysis and Toxicology — Lectures, Professor
Coblentz
Pharmaceutical Assaying and Higher Pharmacy — Lectures and
laboratory work. Professor Diekman
Physiological Chemistry — Lectures, Professor Gies
Food and Drug Course
Commercial Organic Analysis and Toxicology — Lectures and lab-
oratory course, Professor Coblentz
Inorganic Quantitative Analysis — Lectures and laboratory course,
Professor Vorisek
Pharmaceutical Assaying — Lectures and laboratory course, Pro-
fessor Diekman
Technical Microscopy — Laboratory course, Acting Professor
Mansfield
Pharmacology, Materia Medica, and Therapeutics
Christian A. Herter, M.D Professor of Pharmacology and
Therapeutics
Samuel W. Lambert, A.M., M.D. . . .Professor of Applied Therapeutics
Simon Baruch, M.D Professor of Hydrotherapy
Alfred N. Richards, Ph.D Instructor in Pharmacology
Arthur M. Shrady, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Hydrotherapy
PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS 129
Walter A. Bastedo, M.D Instructor in Materia Medica and
Pharmacology and Assistant in Applied Therapeutics
Henry S. Patterson, M.D . . . . Chief of Clinic and Instructor in Materia
Medica and Therapeutics
William R. Williams, M.D Instructor in Materia Medica and
Therapeutics
Nellis B. Foster, M.D Assistant in Applied Therapeutics
James M. Kent, M.D Assistant in Applied Therapeutics
William R. May, M.D Assistant in Applied Therapeutics
Clinical Assistants in Applied Therapeutics
F. G. Goodridge, M.D. Max Schulman, M.D.
Sigmund Epstein, M.D. Max Nisselson, M.D.
James C. Greenway, M.D. David Kaliski, M.D.
Charles E. Webster, M.D. Henry C. Becker, M.D.
Clinical Assistant in Hydrotherapy
Albert J. Wittson, M.D.
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
51 — The principles of pharmacology, toxicology, and therapeutics.
1 hour. Professor Herter
52 — Applied therapeutics. 1 hour. Professor Lambert
53-54 — Clinical instruction in therapeutics. 4-hour exercises at
the Vanderbilt Clinic, five times a week for eight weeks, to sections.
Professor Lambert and Dr. Patterson
55-56 — Recitations on the work given in lectures of Course 51 and
on general therapeutics. 2 hours, to sections. Dr. Williams
58 — Lectures on hydrotherapy. 1 hour. Professor Baruch
59-60 — Pharmacology' and the principles of materia medica. 2
hours for one half-year; 1 hour for one half-year. Dr. Bastedo
61-62 — Practical instruction in the pharmaceutical laboratory.
i£ hours. Dr. Bastedo
63-64 — Recitations in materia medica and pharmacology. 1
hour. Drs. Bastedo and Richards
65 — Laboratory course in pharmacology. 2-hour exercises once a
week for one half of the year. Dr. Richards
66 — Instruction in prescription-writing. £ hour. Dr. Bastedo
67-68 — Prescription work in the pharmaceutical laboratory, for
advanced students. Optional course. Dr. Bastedo
69—70 — Lectures on pharmacology and therapeutics. 1 hour.
Drs. Williams, Patterson, and Richards
130 PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY
71-72 — Clinical instruction in hydrotherapy. In sections of the
class. Four hours a week for one month for each section. Professor
Baruch and Dr. Shrady
Research
The research laboratory of pharmacology is open to a limited
number of workers.
Philosophy and Psychology
James McKeen Cattell, Ph.D., LL.D Professor
Moses Allen Starr, M.D., LL.D., Sc. D Professor
Herbert Gardiner Lord, A.M Professor
Edward Lee Thorndike, Ph.D Professor
Frederick J. E. Woodbridge, A.M., LL.D . . . .Johnsonian Professor
Felix Adler, Ph.D Professor
Charles Augustus Strong, A.B Professor
John Angus MacVannel, Ph.D Professor
George Stuart Fullerton, Ph.D., LL.D Professor
John Dewey, Ph.D., LL.D Professor
Robert Sessions Woodworth, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
William Pepperrell Montague, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Dickinson Sergeant Miller, Ph.D Professor
Naomi Norsworthy, Ph.D Instructor
Kate Gordon, Ph.D Instructor
Harold Chapman Brown, Ph.D Tutor
Wendell T. Bush, Ph.D Lecturer
Arthur Oncken Love joy, A.M Lecturer
H. H. Woodrow, A.B Lecturer
Warner Brown, A.M Assistant
Harry Levi Hollingsworth, A.B Assistant
Max Forester Eastman, A.B Assistant
Frank C. Becker, A.B Assistant
William F. Cooley, A.M Assistant
Mary Theodora Whitley, B.S Assistant
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D., (Cantab) Litt. D. (Oxon.)
President and Professor
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
Courses in Philosophy
A1-A2 — At Columbia College: The principles of science. 3 hours.
Professors Woodbridge, Miller, and Lovejoy, Dr. Brown, Mr.
Eastman and Mr. Becker. At Barnard College: Introductory
psychology. 3 hours, first half-year. Introductory logic. 3 hours,
second half-year. Professor Montague and Dr. Brown
PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY 13 1
21-22 — Ethics. At Columbia College, 3 hours. At Barnard Col-
lege, 3 hours. Professor Lord
[101-102 — Metaphysics. 2 hours. Professor Fullerton]
[1 21-122 — Psychological ethics. 2 hours. Professor Dewey]
[123-124 — Advanced ethics. Professor Montague]
126 — Social and political problems of the United States from the
ethical point of view. 2 hours. Professor Adler
127 — Contemporary ethical ideals. 2 hours. Professor Miller
129-130 — History of modern ethical ideas. 2 hours. Professor
Dewey
[141-142 — Principles and problems of esthetics. 2 hours. Dr.
Brown]
161-162 — The history of philosophy. At Columbia College, 3 hours.
At Barnard College, 3 hours. Professor Montague
[163-164 — The philosophy of Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz. 2
hours. Professor Miller]
165-166 — British philosophy from Locke to Herbert Spencer. 2
hours. Dr. Brown
167-168 — The philosophy of Kant. 2 hours. Professor Lovejoy
169-170 — The philosophy of Plato and Aristotle. Professor Wood-
bridge and Dr. Bush
181-182 — Practicum. Philosophy of education. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor MacVannel
203-204 — Logic and metaphysics. 2 hours. Professor Wood-
bridge
[205-206 — The philosophy of realism. 2 hours. Professor
Montague]
207-208 — Types of logical theory. 2 hours. Professor Dewey
209-210 — Types of epistemological theory. 2 hours. Dr. Bush
211-122 — -Research work in philosophy. Professor Dewey
213-214 — Research work in philosophy. Professor Woodbridge
[221-222 — Logic of ethics. Professor Dewey]
225-226 — Seminar in ethics. Professor Adler
227-228 — Moral and political philosophy. 2 hours. Professor
Dewey
262 — The philosophy of Thomas Aquinas. 2 hours. Professor
Miller
265-266 — Research work in the history of philosophy. {Spinoza.)
2 hours. Professor Woodbridge
281-282 — Seminar. Professor MacVannel
132 PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY
[301-302 — Seminar in ethics. Professor Montague]
Philosophy of Religion (at the Union Theological Seminary)
A — Philosophy of religion — the philosophical foundation. 2 hours,
first half-year. Professor Knox
B — Theism. 2 hours, second half-year. Professor Knox
C — Survey of the ethnic faiths. 2 hours, first half-year. Professor
Knox
F — Introduction to the study of the philosophy of religion. 2 hours.
Professor Knox
Apologetics B and D may also be counted as courses in the philosophy of
religion.
Philosophy of Religion (at the General Theological Seminary)
A — Psychology , of religion. 2 hours, second half-year. Professor
Hayes
B — Christian theism. 4 hours, first half-year. Professor Hayes
q — Studies in the philosophy of religion. 2 hours, first half-year.
Professor Hayes
G — Studies in the ethnic religions. 2 hours, second half-year. Pro-
fessor Hayes
Ethics (at the Union Theological Seminary)
A andjB — Christian ethics. 2 hours. Professor Thomas C. Hall
C — Special introduction to ethics. 2 hours, first half-year. Pro-
fessor Thomas C. Hall
E — History of ethical thought. 2 hours. Professor Thomas C.
Hall
G — Christian casuistry. 1 hour. Professor Thomas C. Hall
H — Study of modern ethics. 2 hours. Professor Thomas C. Hall
J — The field of ethical inquiry. 2 hours, first half-year. Professor
Thomas'C. Hall
Ethics (at the General Theological Seminary)
A — Ethical ; development in the Old Testament with a comparative
view of ethnic codes. 2 hours, second half-year. Mr. Hunt
B — The^ethics of the New Testament. 2 hours, first half-year. Mr.
Hunt
C — Christian ethics'in relation to modern social problems. 2 hours,
second half-year. Mr. Hunt
Courses in Psychology
1-2 — Elements of general psychology. 3 hours. Professor Lord
PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY 133
3-4 — Experimental psychology, introductory course. Lectures, 3
hours. Laboratory work, 4 hours. Professor Woodworth assisted
by Mr. Brown
7-8 — Experimental psychology, introductory course. Lectures,
2 hours. Laboratory work, 4 hours. At Barnard College. Mr.
Woodrow
21-22 — Child psychology. 2 hours. Dr. Norsworthy
24 — Psychology and education of exceptional children. 2 hours.
Dr. Norsworthy
111-112 — Experimental psychology, advanced course. 2 hours.
Professor Cattell
1 1 3-1 1 4 — Experimental psychology. Laboratory work in connec-
tion with Psychology 11 1-1 12. 2 to 8 hours. Professor Cattell and
Mr. HOLLINGWORTH
121-122 — Genetic psychology, advanced course. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Thorndike
131-132 — Physiological psychology. 3 hours. Professor Wood-
worth
133-134 — Laboratory course in physiological psychology. 2 to 8
hours. Professor Woodworth and Mr. Brown
[135-136 — Pathological psychology. 3 hours. Professor Wood-
worth]
137-138 — Laboratory and observational work in pathological psy-
chology. 2 or 8 hours. Professor Woodworth and Mr. Brown
161 — Analytic psychology. 2 hours. Professor Strong
163 — Philosophy of mind. 2 hours. Professor Strong
[1 71-172 — Social psychology. 2 hours. Professor Dewey]
221-222 — The application of psychological and statistical methods
to education. 2 hours. Professor Thorndike
[231-232 — Special psychology. 2 hours. Professor Woodworth]
233-234 — Research in physiological and pathological psychology.
Professor Woodworth assisted by Mr. Brown
251-252 — Diseases of the mind and nervous system. 1 hour, four
months. Not open to women. Professor Starr
261-262 — Research work in analytic psychology and the philosophy
of mind. Professor Strong
281-282 — Problems in experimental psychology. 2 hours. Pro-
fessors Cattell and Woodworth
283-284 — Research work in experimental psychology. Professor
Cattell assisted by Mr. Hollingworth and Mr. Brown
321-322 — Seminar. Professor Thorndike
134 PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY
401-402 — Colloquium in psychology. Professors Cattell, Thorn-
dike, and Woodworth
Equipment
Library Facilities — The library facilities of Columbia University
and of the city of New York, for students of philosophy and psychol-
ogy, are unusually good. The collection of books on the history of
philosophy in the University Library is very large, that on Kant and
his philosophy being especially complete. About 1000 periodicals
are regularly received, and among them will be found every journal of
importance, American or foreign, dealing with philosophy or psycho-
logy. Duplicates of the more important psychological books and
journals are placed in the Psychological Laboratory, where there is
also a card index of psychological literature containing over 25,000
titles. Students of psychology will also find much of value in the
Library of the Academy of Medicine, 15 West 43d Street, which is
open to students free of charge. The New York Public Library is
also available for students, when introduced by one of the instructors,
on especially favorable terms.
The Psychological Laboratory — The laboratory is in Schermer-
horn Hall, a building "devoted to the advancement of natural sci-
ence." It occupies the eastern half of the second floor and part of the
floor immediately above, the rooms being as follows: A lecture-room,
seating one hundred students, used also as a general laboratory; a
seminar room with a department library, a workshop, a photographic
and chemical room, an apparatus cabinet, an anthropometric labora-
tory, five rooms used as offices and laboratories by the officers of the
department, and eight research laboratories. Two of these are dark-
rooms, specially constructed to exclude sound as well as light, 18 feet
high and well ventilated. The laboratory has light from the north
and south, is supplied with electric current of both high and low poten-
tial, and is in all respects equipped both for instruction and research.
The collection of apparatus includes: (1) Outfit for making and re-
pairing apparatus, electric motors, etc. A skilled instrument-maker
is continually employed, adding greatly to the efficiency of the labora-
tory. (2) The outfit of an anthropometric laboratory with which
freshmen in the college and others are annually tested. (3) The ap-
paratus, preparations, charts, etc., needed for complete courses in
experimental, physiological, and genetic psychology; and (4) the
apparatus that has been used or is being used in special researches, a
large part of which has been made especially for the laboratory. The
outfit for the courses of instruction is now in large measure secured,
and the annual appropriations can be used chiefly for apparatus needed
in special researches.
Photography and Photomicrography
(See page 126)
PHYSICAL EDUCATION 135
Physical Education
Thomas Denison Wood, M.D Professor
George Louis Meylan, A.M., M.D.. .Adjunct Professor and Medical
Director of the University Gymnasium
William Skarstrom, M.D Instructor
A. Tra Prettyman Assistant
Dudley Billings Reid, A.B Assistant
Arthur Shoemaker, M.D Assistant
Charles S. Botsford Assistant
A. W. Hendrian Assistant
George Thomas Holm Teacher of Swimming
George J. Bagley Secretary
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
For Men
Hygiene 1-2. Lectures, quizzes, and a report on some phase of
personal hygiene or sanitation. 2 hours. Professor Meylan
Physical education A1-A2. 2 hours a week of elementary graded
gymnastic exercises, swimming, and 6 lectures on personal hygiene.
In sections. 2 hours. Dr. Skarstrom and Assistants
Physical education B1-B2. 2 hours a week of graded gymnastic
exercises, athletics, and 6 lectures on personal hygiene. In sections
2 hours. Professor Meylan, Mr. Prettyman, and Assistants
For Women
A1-A2 — Elementary graded gymnastic exercises and lectures on
personal hygiene. In sections. 2 hours. Miss Brown
B1-B2 — Graded gymnastic exercises and lectures on personal hy-
giene. In sections. 2 hours. Miss Brown
There are also fourteen courses given under the auspices of Teachers
College: Physical Education 1-2, 3-4, 5, 6, 9-10, 106, 107 108, 109-
110, 113, 115-116, 119-120, Education 87-88, 189-190, and 289-290.
Equipment
The main exercising room is semicircular in shape, and has an area
of 16,000 square feet. The ceiling is 35 feet high, and the room is
well lighted and well ventilated, both naturally and artificially. The
running track is 11 feet wide, with ends raised, and measures 10 laps
to the mile. On the same floor as the running track are the Gym-
nasium and Director's offices, rooms for fencing, boxing, and handball,
two large dressing-rooms with 1804 steel lockers, and 32 shower-baths.
Below the exercising room is the swimming pool, semicircular in shape ;
it measures 100 by 50 feet on its axes, and contains 200,000 gallons of
136 PHYSICS
water. The depth is from 4 to 10 feet. Around the pool are the
dressing-rooms, and 20 shower-, needle,- and tub-baths. On this floor
is also a large room and two dressing-rooms equipped with shower-
baths and lavatories, for the use of the various athletic teams.
The Frederick Ferris Thompson Memorial Building, given to Teach-
ers College by Mrs. F. F. Thompson, has been recently completed.
It is a building of four stories devoted to the purposes of physical
education and school hygiene. It contains offices, examination
rooms, lecture- and class-rooms, laboratories, hand-ball courts, bowl-
ing alleys, a swimming pool, four gymnasiums, rooms for corrective
exercises, dressing-rooms, shower-baths, fencing-room, and a suite
of rooms for photographic purposes. This building provides physical-
training facilities for the women, the pupils of the Horace Mann School,
and the varied equipment for the theoretical and practical instruction
of professional students in Physical Education.
The Gymnasium is open daily during the academic year, except on
Sundays and legal holidays, from 8.30 a.m. to 6.30 p.m., Saturdays to
5 p.m. It is closed for the entire day only on Thanksgiving, Christmas,
New Year's, and Good Friday. On all other holidays it is open from
2 to 6 p.m. One or more of the instructors are on the floor at all times
when the Gymnasium is open.
A course in physical education is required of all Freshmen and Sopho-
mores in Columbia College, and first- and secon d-year students in the
Schools of Applied Science, except students holding degrees from other
colleges. A physical examination is required of each student in these
classes upon entrance and at the end of the second year, and of all other
students taking part in athletics.
Every student is entitled to a physical examination by the Medical
Director. On the basis of this examination advice is given as to the
kind and amount of exercise best adapted to his needs.
Physics
William Hallock, Ph.D Professor
Michael I. Pupin, Ph.D., Sc.D Professor of Electro-Mechanics
Margaret E. Maltby, Ph.D. . . .Adjunct Professor {Barnard College)
Herschel C. Parker, Ph.B Adjunct Professor
Ernest F. Nichols, Ph.D Professor of Experimental Physics
Joseph C. Pfister, A.M Adjunct Professor of Mechanics
Frank L. Tufts, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Albert P. Wills, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Mechanics
Richard C. Maclaurin, A.M..LL.D. Professor of Mathematical Physics
Charles C. Trowbridge, M.S Instructor
« George B. Pegram, Ph.D Instructor
2 Bergen Davis, Ph.D Tutor
1 Absent on leave.
2 Ernest Kempton Adams Fellow for 1907-08.
PHYSICS 137
Samuel R. Williams, Ph.D Tutor (Barnard College)
K. Gborgb Falk, Ph.D Tutor
Charles Forbes, B.S., M.D Curator
William S. Day, Ph.D Lecturer
F. II. Getman, Ph.D Lecturer
Julian Blanchard, A.B Assistant
Hermon W. Farwell, A.M Assistant
Leighton.B. Morse, Ph.B Assistant
Grace Langford, S.B Assistant (Barnard College)
Wii.lard L. Severinghaus, A.M Assistant
Charles B. Markham, A.M Assistant
Reinhard Wetzel, B.S Assistant
Edwin B. Wheeler, B.S Assistant
Courses equivalent to 3-4, 101-102, 103-104 are given at Barnard
College by Professor Maltby.
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
1 or 2 (Science A) — General elementary physics. 3 hours for
either half-year. Mr. Trowbridge
Science A requires 3 hours laboratory work with this course.
3-4 — General physics — Elementary Mechanics — Properties of matter,
sound, light. First half-year. 2 hours lectures, 3 hours recitation.
Heat, electricity, and magnetism. Second half-year. 2 hours lectures,
1 hour recitation. Professor Hallock, Drs. Davis, Falk and Messrs.
Farwell, Severinghaus, and Moore.
3 — (Old course) — General physics, sound, light and heat. 1 hour
lecture, 2 hours recitation. Professor Tufts and Assistants.
A laboratory course must be taken with this and the three follow-
ing courses.
101-102 — Magnetism and electricity. 3 hours. Sound. 2 hours.
Professor Tufts
103-104 — Light. 3 hours. Professor Hallock. Heat. 3 hours.
Dr. Day
105 — Critical discussion of methods of measurement and computa-
tion according to the C. G. S. system in electricity and magnetism
Professor Parker
107-108 — Fundamental phenomena of theoretical physics. 1 hour.
Professor Tufts
171-172 — Courses in advanced laboratory work upon the various
subjects of physics, including collateral reading, intended to lead the
way to original research.
An examination is required on general theory in connection with
this course.
138 PHYSICS
201 — Discharge of eletricity through gases. 2 hours. Dr. Davis
202 — Theory of dimensions with special reference to electrical
and magnetic units; presupposes courses 101 to 104. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Tufts
203 — Sound, advanced course, presupposes 102. 2 hours. Dr.
Pegram [Not given in 1907-S]
204 — Light, advanced course, presupposes 103. 3 hours. Pro-
fessor Hallock
205 — Heat, advanced course, presupposes 104. 3 hours. Dr. Day
206 — Phenomena of radioactivity, presupposes 201. 2 hours. Dr.
Pegram [Not given in 1907-8.]
209 — The design and construction of apparatus. 1 hour. Professor
Hallock
211-212 — Problems of radiation, including emission, absorption, dis-
persion, etc. 2 hours. Professor Nichols
271-272 — Original research under the direction of the professors is
open to^ properly qualified persons
Laboratory Courses
NUMBER TIME CHARACTER
31-32 3 hours Elementary
23-24 2 hours Intermediate
43-44 4 hours Intermediate
63-64 6 hours Intermediate
25-26 2 hours Advanced
45-46 4 hours Advanced
65-66 6 hours Advanced
Mathematical Physics
1-2 — Elementary mechanics. 2 hours. Professor Pfister
3-4 — Elementary thermodynamics and hydromechanics. 2 hours.
Professor Pfister
5-6 — Analytical mechanics, abridged course. 2 hours. Dr. Davis
7 — Thermodynamics, abridged course. 2 hours. Professor Wills
101-102 — Analytical mechanics. 3 hours. Professor Pfister
103-104 — Theoretical mechanics. 2 hours. Professor Pfister
106 — Thermodynamics with special reference to its bearing on the
theory of heat engines. 3 hours. Professor Wills
107 — Theory of dynamo and motor (introductory). 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Wills
108 — Theory of direct-current dynamo and motor. 3 hours. Pro-
fessors Pupin and Wills
PHYSICS 139
109 — Theory of alternators and transformers. 3 hours. Professor
Pupin
no — Theory of variable currents. 3 hours. Professor Pupin
To graduate students who desire a general acquaintance with Mathe-
matical Physics, Professors Pupin and Wills offer the following cycle
of courses which may be completed in two years by taking four hours
a week.
In 1908-1909 the courses given in 1907-1908, as stated below, by
Professor Pupin will be given by Professor Wills, and vice versa,
this alternation taking place every year.
201 — Mechanics. 2 hours. Professor Wills
202 — Theory of elasticity. 2 hours. Professor Wills
203 — Theory of the potential function. 2 hours. Professor Pupin
204 — Hydrokinetics. 2 hours. Professor Pupin
205-206 — Electricity and magnetism — Electro-magnetic theory of
light. 2 hours. Professor Wlls
207-208 — Partial differential equations of physics. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Pupin
In addition to this cycle the following courses are given at intervals
as required.
209 — Lectures on special problems. 2 hours. Professor Pupin
211 — Thermodynamics. 2 hours. Professor Wills
Journal Club — The Journal Club of the department meets every
week for the discussion of the current literature of physics and of re-
ports of special investigations. Professor Nichols in charge.
Equipment
The laboratories and lecture-rooms of the Department of Physics
occupy four floors of Fayerweather Hall on the eastern side of the
University grounds. The building is supplied with all ordinary con-
veniences, including compressed air, steam, electricity for power and
light, direct and alternating current. There is a vertical shaft 95 feet
high, with gas, electric, and water outlets every ten feet. In the sub-
basement a constant-temperature room is placed twelve feet below
the surface of the ground. There are two lecture-rooms, a library, an
apparatus room, a shop, and a small laboratory on the first floor, while
the remaining three floors devoted to the department are occupied by
laboratories of different kinds.
The general laboratories are provided with all the usual apparatus
for undergraduate work in mechanics, sound, heat, light, electricity,
and magnetism.
The laboratories used for research have been named by the Trus-
tees the "Phoenix Physical Laboratories," in memory of Mr. Stephen
140 PHYSIOLOGY
Whitney Phoenix, who bequeathed to the University a generous sum
as an endowment for research in the physical sciences. On account
of this endowment unusual facilities are offered for advanced work
and research in physics. Among the recent additions to the equip-
ment of these laboratories may be mentioned the following : pulsometer
and mercury air-pumps; a 6o-cell large capacity storage battery with
a complete switchboard and wiring system and a portable 500-cell
small capacity storage battery; two duBois-Rubens armored galvan-
ometers; two 10-inch induction coils; Wolff precision potentiometers
and Wheatstone bridges, standardized at the Reichsanstalt ; a set of
high-potential, direct-current dynamos, giving 8000 volts; a large
electromagnet for special researches; a Michelson interferometer;
a 2 1 -foot concave grating spectroscope; a reflecting spectrometer
and two torsion radiometers for work in radiation.
Arrangements have been made by which it is possible to carry on
certain investigations at the Botanical Garden, in Bronx Park, free
from the magnetic and other disturbances of the city.
The department has a shop equipped with wood-, metal-, and glass-
working machinery, and employs a skilled mechanician.
The Physical Laboratories at Barnard College occupy the second
floor of Fiske Hall. They are supplied with the usual conveniences
and well equipped with suitable apparatus for quantitative experi-
mental work in all the courses offered. Through the generosity of
Mrs. Collord, the department has recently acquired a very complete
equipment in sound apparatus suitable for illustrating the theory
of the production of tone in musical instruments, and for analyzing
musical sounds.
The laboratories and lecture-room of Teachers College are well
equipped for illustrating the teaching of physics in secondary and
normal schools. In these the physics classes of the Horace Mann
School receive their instruction, and by observation and practical
work in connection with the classes the students in Education 191-
192 are enabled to become familiar with the duties of a teacher of
physics.
Physiology
John Green Curtis, M.D., LL.D Professor
Frederic Schiller Lee, Ph.D Professor
Russell Burton-Opitz, S.M., Ph.D., M.D Adjunct Professor
Richard Hoop Cunningham, M.D Instructor
Haven Emerson, A.M., M.D Demonstrator
Leander Howard Shearer, M.D Demonstrator
Arthur Walker Bingham, M.D Demonstrator
Harry Mayham Keator, M.D Demonstrator
Joseph Grant Yocum, M.D Demonstrator
Theodore J. Abbott, M.D Demonstrator
None of the courses in this department is open to women.
PHYSIOLOGY 141
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
101-102 — Elementary physiology. Given with the co-operation of
the Department of Physiological Chemistry. 1 hour lecture, and 2
hours laboratory work. Professors Burton-Opitz and Gies
103-104 — General physiology. 1 hour. Professor Lee
105-106 — Laboratory course in general physiology. 5 hours. Pro-
fessor Burton-Opitz
107 — Laboratory course in special physiology. 3 hours. Professor
Curtis or Professor Burton-Opitz
108-109 — The physiology of man as related to that of other mam-
mals and of lower vertebrates. Lectures and demonstrations, 4 hours.
Recitations, 1 hour. Laboratory work, 3 hours. Professors Curtis
and Burton-Opitz, Drs. Emerson, Shearer, Bingham, Keator, and
Yocum
111-112 — Electro-physiology. Hours and work to be arranged
with the Instructor, Dr. Cunningham
Research
The laboratory is open for research, under the direction of its officers,
to advanced workers.
Equipment
The Department of Physiology possesses:
I — At the College of Physicians and Surgeons: (1) A laboratory for
research and the preparing of demonstrations; (2) A small laboratory
for histological research with special reference to physiological prob-
lems. (3) Two rooms for optical or psychological work or for photog-
raphy. (4) Two private laboratories for professors of the department.
(5) Two laboratories for practical instruction. (6) A room for recita-
tions and for lectures and demonstrations to limited classes. (7)
Easy access to a large lecture-room specially fitted for experimental
teaching. (8) The Swift Physiological Cabinet, for the accommoda-
tion of a specially endowed^and very full collection of apparatus of pre-
cision, mainly for research.
II — In Schermerhorn Hall: The\ise of a laboratory equipped for the
instruction of undergraduates.
The physiological journals are accessible to the students of the de-
partment; also the most important monographs and other books, both
modern and ancient.
Political Economy and Finance
(See page 72)
142 PRACTICE OF MEDICINE
Political Philosophy
(See page 96)
Politics
(See page 106)
Practice of Medicine
Walter B. James, M.D., LL.D.. Bard Professor of the Practice of
Medicine
Frank W. Jackson, M.D Professor of Clinical Medicine
George Roe Lockwood, M.D. .Adjunct Professor of Clinical Medicine
William K. Draper, M.D Adjunct Professor of Clinical Medicine
Van Horne Norrie, M.D Adjunct Professor of Clinical Medicine
Francis P. Kinnicutt, M.D Professor of Clinical Medicine
John Seymour Thacher, M.D Professor of Clinical Medicine
Francis Huber, M.D Professor of Clinical Medicine
George Montague Swift, M.D Instructor in Medicine
Albert E. Sumner, M.D Instructor in Physical Diagnosis
T. Stuart Hart, M.D Instructor in Physical Diagnosis
James A. Miller, M.D Instructor in Physical Diagnosis
Nathaniel B. Potter, M.D Instructor in Medicine
Fred P. Solley, M.D Instructor in Medicine
Lewis F. Frissell, M.D Instructor in Physical Diagnosis
Linsly R. Williams, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor in
Medicine
David Bovaird, Jr., M.D Tutor in Medicine
Evan M. Evans, M.D Tutor in Medicine
Edmund L. Dow, M.D Tutor in Medicine
D. Stuart D. Jessup, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Austen F. Riggs, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Curtenius Gillette, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Isaac Ogden Woodruff, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Charles S. Fischer, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Haven Emerson, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Leander H. Shearer, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Claude A. Frink, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Howard H. Mason, M.D Assistant in Medicine
Clinical Assistants
Jay William Dounce, M.D. Herman Eichhorn, M.D.
Stanmore L. Cash, M.D. Julius W. Weinstein, M.D.
George E. Barnes, M.D. Gerald H. Grout, M.D.
Edward Cook, M.D.
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
51-52 — Clinical lectures on general medicine. Vanderbilt Clinic
1 hour a week. Professor James
ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES 143
53-54 — Clinical lectures on general medicine. Roosevelt Hospital,
1 hour a week. Professors James and Jackson
55_56 — Bedside instruction. In the wards of Roosevelt or Pres-
byterian Hospitals in sections. 6 hours for four weeks. Professor
James
57-58 — Physical diagnosis. Practical instruction in the Vanderbilt
Clinic and Bellevue Hospital. 24 lessons for each student. Drs.
Miller, Hart, and Frissell
59-60 — Hospital general diagnosis. 20 lessons, 4 hours each, for
each student, Bellevue Hospital. Professor Jackson, and Drs. Lock-
wood, Draper, Norrie, and Dr. Woodruff
61-62 — Clinical instruction to sections, St. Mary's Free Hospital
for Children. Twice a week for 8 weeks. Dr. Swift
63-64 — Recitations in general medicine. In sections, 2 hours. Drs.
Bovaird and Evans
65-66 — Recitations in general medicine. In sections. 1 hour. Dr.
Dow
67-68 — Lectures and demonstrations on physical diagnosis. 1 hour.
Dr. Sumner
69-70 — Hospital clinics in general medicine. Optional
Presbyterian Hospital. Professors Kinnicutt and Thacher
St. Mary's Free Hospital. Dr. Swift
71-72 — Practical instruction, Vanderbilt Clinic. In sections, 8
hours a week for one month. Dr. Williams and Assistants in
Medicine
Psychology
(See page 130)
Public Law and Jurisprudence
(See page 103)
Rhetoric and English Composition
(See page 83)
Romance Languages and Literatures
Adolphe Cohn, LL.B., A.M Professor
Henry Alfred Todd, Ph.D Professor of Romance Philology
Carlo Leonardo Speranza, LL.B., A.M Professor of Italian
> Benjamin Duryea Woodward, Ph.D Professor
Louis Auguste Loiseaux, B.S Adjunct Professor
1 Absent on leave, 1907- 1908.
144 ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
Curtis Hidden Page, Ph.D Adjunct Professor
Daniel Jordan, S.B., Pd.B Adjunct Professor
Henry Bargy, A.M Instructor
John Driscoll Fitz-Gerald, Ph.D Instructor
Henri Franjois Muller, B. es L Tutor
John G. Gill, Ph.D Tutor
Dino Bigongiari, A.B Lecturer
John Lawrence Gerig, Ph.D Lecturer
Courses 201, 203, and 204 are given by Professor Brander Matthews
of the Department of English.
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
For courses under 100 there is a special numbering under French,
Italian, and Spanish respectively. Courses above 100 are all numbered
under the general heading Romance Languages and Literatures.
Courses in French
A1-A2 — Elementary course. 3 hours. Columbia College, Mr
Jordan and Dr. Gill. Barnard College, Mr. Muller and Dr. Gerig
B1-B2 — Grammar, reading, and composition. 3 hours. Columbia
College, Mr. Jordan, Dr. Fitz-Gerald, Dr. Gill, and Dr. Gerig.
Barnard College, Mr. Muller and Dr. Gerig
j- 1-2 — Introduction to the study of French literature. 3 or 4 hours.
Columbia College, Professors Page and Jordan and Dr. Gerig. Bar-
nard College, Mr. Muller and Dr. Gerig
•j- 3-4 — Historical French. Practice in reading, writing, and speak-
ing French. 3 hours. Columbia College, Mr. Muller. Barnard
College, Professor Jordan
•j- 5-6 — History of French literature in the seventeenth century. 3
hours. Mr. Bargy
7-8 — History of the French language with special application to
modern sounds and forms. 2 hours. Dr. Gerig
[21-22 — Advanced grammar and composition. 3 hours. Pro-
fessor Cohn, Teachers College]
101-102 — History of French literature in the eighteenth century,
especially Voltaire. 3 hours. Professor Cohn
f 101-102 — History of French literature in the eighteenth century.
3 hours. Barnard College, Mr. Bargy
[103-104 — History of French literature in the eighteenth century,
especially Montesquieu, Rousseau, and the Encyclopedists. 3 hours.
Mr. Bargy]
t [107-108 — History of the French literary movement in the first
half of the nineteenth century. 2 hours. Professor Page]
t Given only in Barnard College.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES 145
t 109-110 — History of the French literary movement in the second
half of the nineteenth century. 2 hours. Professor Page
111-112 — French literature of the sixteenth century. 2 hours.
Professor Loiseaux
113-114 — Old French. Reading and discussion of selected extracts
and of complete texts. 2 hours. Professor Todd
[201 — The French dramatists of the nineteenth century. 2 hours.
Professor Brander Matthews]
203-204 — Moliere and modern comedy. 2 hours. Professor
Brander Matthews
[205-206 — Special topics in seventeenth century French literature.
2 hours. Professor Cohn]
207-208 — Special topics in eighteenth century French literature.
2 hours. Professor Cohn
209-210 — Special topics in sixteenth century French literature. 2
hours. Professor Page
2 1 1-2 1 2 — History of criticism and literary ideals in France. 2
hours. Mr. Bargy
[213-214 — French literature in its relation to history and political
science. 2 hours. Mr. Bargy]
Education 165-166. — Methods of teaching French in secondary
schools. 2 hours. Teachers College, Professor Cohn
301-302 — Seminar — Special topics in Romance literature. Subject
for 1907-08. The narrative and historical works of Voltaire. 2 hours.
Professor Cohn
15-16 — French conversation. 1 hour. Columbia College, Professor
Loiseaux, Barnard College, Mr. Muller
Courses in Italian
*i-2 — Elementary course — Grammar, reading, and composition.
3 hours. Mr. Bigongiari
*3-4 — General introduction to the study of Italian literature. Com-
position. 3 hours. Professor Speranza
131-132 — Italian literature of the fourteenth and fifteenth cen-
turies exclusive of the Divina Commedia. Composition. 3 hours.
Mr. Bigongiari
[133-134 — Italian literature of the sixteenth century and of the
period of decadence down to the middle of the eighteenth century.
Composition, 3 hours. Mr. Bigongiari]
[135-136 — Critical study of Dante's Divina Commedia. First part.
2 hours. Professor Speranza]
* Starrred courses are given in both Columbia College and Barnard College,
t Given only in Barnard College.
146 ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
I37-I38 — Critical study of Dante's Divina Commedia. Second
part. 2 hours. Professor Speranza
231-232 — Italian literature of the second half of the eighteenth
century and of the nineteenth century. 3 hours. Professor Speranza
Courses in Spanish
*i-2 — Elementary course. 3 hours. Professor Loiseaux
♦3-4 — General introduction to Spanish literature. Composition.
3 hours. Columbia College, Dr. Fitz-Gerald; Barnard College,
Professor Loiseaux
141-142 — The novela of the golden age. 3 hours. Dr. Fitz-
Gerald
[143-144 — The Spanish classical drama. 3 hours. Dr. Fitz-
Gerald]
241-242 — History of Spanish literature. Lectures and private
reading. 1 hour. Dr. Fitz-Gerald
11-12 — Spanish conversation. 1 hour. Professor Loiseaux
Courses in Romance Philology
151-152 — Introduction to Romance philology. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Todd
[251-252 — Critical study of the Chanson de Roland. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Todd]
253-254 — Oldest monuments of the French language. 1 hour. Pro-
fessor Todd
[255-256 — Old French dialects. 1 hour. Professor Todd]
257-258 — The Oriental element in the Romance literatures of the
Middle Ages. Dr. Gill
259-260 — Old Provencal. 1 hour. Professor Todd
[261-262 — The origins of Spanish poetry. 1 hour. Dr. Fitz-
Gerald]
263-264 — The oldest monuments of the Spanish language. 1 hour.
Dr. Fitz-Gerald
[265-266 — The origins of the Spanish novela. 1 hour. Dr. Fitz-
Gerald]
267-268 — The origins of the Spanish drama. 1 hour. Dr. Fitz-
Gerald
271-272 — Portuguese. 2 hours. Professor Todd
273-274 — Rumanian. 2 hours. Professor Cohn
303-304 — Seminar — Presentation and discussion of doctoral disser-
tation work. 2 hours. Professor Todd
* Starred courses are given in both Columbia College and Barnard College.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES 147
Public Lectures
Weekly lectures in French, and occasional lectures in Italian and
Spanish, open to all members of the University, are given by the mem-
bers of the department and by invited lecturers.
The Romance Club
The Romance Club consists of all the instructors and advanced
students in the department. At its meetings, which are partly of a
social character, an account is given of the most important articles on
the Romance languages and literatures in the recent French, English,
German, Italian, and Spanish periodicals; new books are discussed,
letters from absent instructors and former students in the department
are read, etc.
Equipment
The Library of Columbia University is well supplied with French,
Spanish, and Italian works, as well as with works upon Romance
philology. Its list of periodicals of interest for students in the depart-
ment is especially rich. The Library has also complete sets of the
most important series and collections, such as the Altfranzosische
Bibliatliek, Romanische Bibliotliek, publications of the Modern Lan-
guage Association, publications of the Societe" des anciens Textes
francais, Histoire litteraire de la France, Ausgaben und Abhandlungen
aus dem Gebiete der romanischen Philologie, Jahrbuch fur romanische
und englische sprachen, etc.
An important addition to the equipment of the department con-
sists of the library of the Hispanic Society of America, 153d Street
and Audubon Park, the work of which is conducted in agreement
with the Romance department.
Co-operation with the Alliance Frangaise
Elementary evening classes in French are conducted in co-operation
with the Alliance Francaise at Morningside Heights and in the building
of the College of Physicians and surgeons.
French Societies
Two societies have been organized for the purpose of fostering the
use of the French language among the members of the University, viz .,
the Socie'te' Francaise de l'Universite- Columbia, which admits only men
and the Sosi^te" Francaise de Barnard College, which admits only
women. They give performances of French plays. The following
plays have been presented in recent years: Scribe and Legouve"
Bataille de Dames; Meilhac and HaleVy, L'Ete de la Saint-Martin;
Eugene Labiche, Le Voyage de M. Gerrichon; Moliere, Le Medecin
malgre lui, Les Fourberies de Scapin, etc.
148 SURGERY
Shop-work
Offered by the Department of Manual Training at Teachers College
Charles R. Richards, B.S Professor
Charles P. Benns, M.E Instructor
C. C. Sleffel Instructor
Charles W. Weick, B.S Instructor
1-2 — Carpentry, framing, and joinery. 2 afternoons shop practice.
Mr. Weick
2s — Pattern-making and foundry-work. 1 00 hours in 3 weeks in
June. Mr. Weick
3 — Forging. 1 hour conference. 200 hours shop practice during the
year. Mr. Sleffel
4 — Bench-work — Machine-tool work. 1 hour conference for instruc-
tion, and 100 hours shop practice during the year. Mr. Benns
4s — Machine-tool work continued. 100 hours in 3 weeks in June.
Mr. Benns
5/ — Machine-tool work, with special appliances for rapid and
economical production. 2 afternoons. Mr. Benns
7-8 — Carpentry, framing, and joinery, first half-year; wood-turning,
pattern-making, moulding, and foundry-work, second half-year.
1 afternoon shop practice. Mr. Weick
9-10 — Bench-work and vise-work, chipping, filing, threading and
tapping, forging and blacksmith work, swaging, welding and temper-
ing, first half-year; machine-tool work at lathe, planer, shaper, slotter,
and milling machine, second half-year. 1 hour lecture and the equiva-
lent of 1 afternoon shop practice. Mr. Benns and Mr. Sleffel
Eighteen courses in Manual Training are offered under theTauspices
of Teachers College. For details see the Announcement of Teachers
College and the special circular of the department, which will be sent
without charge, upon application to the Secretary of the University.
Social Economy
(See page 72)
^Sociology and Statistics
(See page 72)
Surgery
Joseph A. Blake, M.D Professor
George E. Brewer, M.D Professor of Clinical Surgery
Frank Hartley, M.D Professor of Clinical Surgery and Instructor
in Operative Surgery
SURGERY 149
Andrew J. McCosh, M.D., LL.D .... Professor of Clinical Surgery
Charles T. Poore, M.D Clinical Lecturer
Robert Abbe, M.D Clinical Lecturer
William B. Coley, M.D Clinical Lecturer
Lucius W. Hotchkiss, M.D Clinical Lecturer and Instructor
Bern B. Gallaudet, M.D Clinical Lecturer and Instructor
John B. Walker, M.D Clinical Lecturer and Instructor
Charles N. Dowd, M.D Instructor
Walton Martin, M.D Instructor
Edward M. Foote, M.D Instructor
Alfred S. Taylor, M.D Assistant Instructor in Operative Surgery
A. Emil Schmitt, M.D Assistant Instructor in Operative Surgery
Forbes Hawk.es, M.D Instructor
Clarence A. McWilliams, M.D Instructor
Adrian V. S. Lambert, M.D Instructor
Carleton P. Flint, M.D Instructor
Eugene H. Pool, M.D Instructor
James C. Ayer, M.D Instructor
Percy R. Turnure, M.D Chief of Clinic and Instructor
William C. Clarke, M.D Instructor
J. W. Draper Maury, M.D Instructor
William Darrach, M.D Instructor
Rowland Cox, Jr., M.D Assistant Instructor in Operative Surgery
James H. Kenyon, M.D Assistant Instructor in Operative Surgery
Howard D. Collins, M.D Instructor
James I. Russell, M.D Assistant
Henry Van V. Holcomb, M. D Assistant
Frederick T. Van Beuren, M.D Assistant
Alfred C. Prentice, M.D Assistant
Clinical Assistants
Walter H. Holdridge, M.D. Alfred Raabe, M.D.
Noel B. Leggett, M.D. Clinton B. Knapp, M.D.
Henry V. Holcomb, M.D. Ran son S. Hooker, M.D.
William T. Bull, M.D., Emeritus Professor of Surgery
Robert F. Weir, M.D., Emeritus Professor of Surgery
Charles McBurney, M.D., Emeritus Professor of Surgery
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
For Courses in Genito-Urinary Diseases see under Clinical Instruc-
tion, page 66.
51-52 — Surgical pathology, general and regional surgery — Didactic
lectures. 1 hour. Professor Blake
150 ZOOLOGY
53-54 — Clinics in general surgery at the Vanderbilt Clinic. 2 hours.
Professors Blake and Brewer
55-56 — Clinics at Roosevelt Hospital. 4 hours. Professors Blake
and Brewer
57-58 — Minor surgery and bandaging — Practical instruction at the
Vanderbilt Clinic, and the out-patient department, Roosevelt Hos-
pital. 45 lessons for each student. Drs. Turnure and Darrach
59-60 — Operative surgery upon the cadaver — Practical instruction
to sections. Each student performs for himself upon the cadaver the
principal operations, special attention being paid to operation upon
the abdominal viscera. 10 to 12 lessons for each student. Professor
Hartley, Drs. Taylor, Schmitt, Ayer, Cox, and Kenyon
61-62 — Practical instruction to sections of the class in Vanderbilt
Clinics, Bellevue, Roosevelt, Presbyterian, and [the City Hospitals.
Professor Brewer, Drs. Gallaudet, Hotchkiss, Martin, Flint,
Hawkes, McWilliams, Collins, Foote and assistants in surgery.
63-64 — Practical instruction in the surgery of children at St. Mary's
Free Hospital for Children, to sections of the class, once a week for
two months for each student. Dr. Dowd
66 — Practical instruction in the mechanical treatment of hernia at
the Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled, to sections. 1 hour.
Dr. Coley
67-68 — Recitations in general and regional surgery, to sections.
2 hours. Drs. Pool and Lambert
69-70 — Recitations and clinic in surgical pathology and general
surgery, to sections. 3 hours. Dr. Clarke
71-72 — Practical instruction in surgical technic at the Laboratory
for Surgical Research, to sections. Dr. Maury
73~74 — Hospital Clinics (optional):
New York Hospital. 1 hour. Professor Hartley
St. Luke's Hospital. 1 hour. Dr. Abbe
Presbyterian Hospital. 1 hour. Dr. McCosh
Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled. 5 hours. Professors
Gibney and Bull, and Drs. Coley and Whitman
St. Mary's Free Hospital for Children. 2 hours. Drs. Poore and
Dowd
Zoology
Edmund B. Wilson, Ph.D., LL.D Professor
Henry F. Osborn, Sc.D., LL.D Da Costa Professor
Bashford Dean, Ph.D Professor of Vertebrate Zoology
Henry E. Crampton, Ph.D. . .Professor of Zoology in Barnard College
ZOOLOGY 151
Gary N. Calkins, Ph.D Professor of Protozoology
Maurice A. Bigelow, Ph.D Professor of Biology in Teachers
College
Thomas H. Morgan, Ph.D Professor of Experimental Zoology
James H. McGregor, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of [Zoology
Raymond C. Osburn, Ph.D Instructor in Barnard College
Margaret A. Reed, A.B Tutor in Barnard College
Pauline H. Dederer, A.M Tutor in Barnard College
William K. Gregory, A.M Lecturer
Charles V. Morrill, Jr., A.M Assistant
David W. Whitney, A.M Assistant
Of the following courses 1-2, 4, 5, 91-92, and 101-102 are given
separately at Barnard College, 151-152 only at Barnard; all other
courses are open to women.
For courses given at Teachers College see the current announcement
of Teachers College. *
Courses
See preliminary paragraphs, page 41
1-2 — Elementary biology, zoology, histology, embryology, general
principles of biology (presupposing elementary chemistry or physics).
Shorter course, C 2 hours, L 4 hours; longer course C 3 hours, L 6
hours. Professors Calkins, Dean, Morgan, and McGregor
4 — Experimental biology. 3 hours (one afternoon) of lectures,
conferences, and laboratory work. Prerequisite 1-2. Professor
Morgan
5 — General biology. 3 hours (one afternoon) of lectures, confer-
ences, and laboratory work. Prerequisite 1-2. Professor Wilson
91-92 — General zoology (to follow 1-2). Professor McGregor
[91 — Invertebrates. C 3 hours, L 6 hours]
[92 — Vertebrates. C 3 hours, L 6 hours]
93 — Embryology of vertebrates. C 1 hour, L 2 hours. Professor
McGregor
101-102 — General Zoology. C 3 hours, L 6 hours and assigned
work. Professor McGregor
106 — Cellular biology — General structure and functions of the cell.
C 1 hour, L 5 hours. Professor Wilson
Open to undergraduates who have had at least two years of study in
zoology.
97-98 — Practical histology. Forms a supplement to 91-92 but
may be taken separately, or with 93. Pre-requisite 1-2. C 1 hour,
L 2 hours. Professor McGregor
152 ZOOLOGY
no — Special Morphology. The parasitic protozoa. C 1 hour. L 5
hours. Pre-requisite 1-2. Professor Calkins
151-152 — General physiology (for women). C 2 hours, L 4 hours.
Miss Reed
201-202 — Comparative zoology — Lectures, seminar, and laboratory
work. Two days. Either half may be taken separately.
201 — Special topics in invertebrate zoology. Professor Wilson
202 — Evolution of the vertebrates. Professor Osborn and Dr.
Gregory
203-204 — Mammals, living and fossil — Lectures and laboratory
c ourse. 6 hours (one day). Professor Osborn
The latter part of this course is given in the American Museum of
Natural History.
205 — Fishes, living and fossil — C 1 hour, L 2 hours. Professor
Dean
207 — Advanced biology — Individual study of special biological
problems as an introduction to original investigation.
208-209 — Comparative embryology. One day. Professors Dean
and Calkins
210 — The protochordates. One day. Professor McGregor
213 — The tropisms of animals. 1 hour, with demonstrations and
opportunities for laboratory work. Professor Morgan
215-216 — Experimental zoology. 1 hour with laboratory work on
special problems. Professor Morgan
217 — Regeneration. 1 hour. Professor Morgan
218 — Experimental embryology. This course is parallel to 220.
1 hour. Professor Morgan
220 — Cellular embryology. 6 hours (one day). Professor Wilson
221-222 — Protozoology. C 1 hour, L 5 hours. Professor Calkins
226 — The enteroccela (exclusive of the protochordates). C 1 hour,
L 5 hours. Professor Crampton
Journal Club — Reports and discussions of recent literature by
members of the staff, graduate students, and others. 1 hour a week
throughout the year. Under direction of the staff.
Seminar — Critical discussion of selected topics by members of the
staff and graduate students. Subject and time are specially arranged-
University Biological Lectures — A course of lectures on general
topics, given, as a rule, each year, by members of the staff and eminent
specialists from other institutions. These lectures form the basis of
the Commbia Biological Series, edited by Professors Osborn and
Wilson
ZOOLOGY 153
Laboratories, Libraries, and Equipment
The zoological laboratories on the upper floor of Schermerhorn
comprise a large general undergraduate laboratory, three graduate
laboratories, and eight rooms for private research, besides special
rooms for supplies, aquaria, and preparation. There are also a com-
modious lecture-room, a library, and a seminar-room. The labora-
tories are well equipped with optical instruments, microtomes, and
other apparatus for advanced work. The teaching collections in-
clude a series of the Mediterranean and American marine types, and
the injected vertebrate series of Fric and Muller, a set of standard
and specially prepared charts and wax models, and a variety of living
animals and plants contained in fresh-water and marine aquaria.
The departmental library, a part of the University Library kept in
the laboratory, the gift of Charles H. Senff, Esq., is a memorial to the
late Dr. John I. Northrop. It embraces sets of the standard bio-
logical works and includes the journals and a rapidly increasing col-
lection of special monographs. A fund is available for the purchase
of literature needed in connection with the special researches of
students.
Important adjuncts to zoological work are offered by the American
Museum of Natural History, the Bronx Zoological Garden, the New
York Aquarium, and by the marine biological laboratories at Wood's
Hole, Mass., and Cold Spring Harbor, L. I. An investigator's table
is held at the Wood's Hole laboratory, and the John D. Jones scholar-
ship is available at the Cold Spring Harbor laboratory.
ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS
Committee
Professor Young, Chairman; Professors Cole, Crampton, Hamlin,
Hervey, Lambert, McCrea, Maclay, Rusby, and Sachs.
GENERAL STATEMENT
There are no examinations for admission to the Schools of Law,
Political Science, Philosophy, Pure Science, and Fine Arts (Courses
leading to degrees), or to Teachers College. For the requirements
for admission to these departments, see the separate announcements
of the Schools and Faculties concerned.
Examinations for admission to Columbia College, Barnard College,
the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the College of Pharmacy
(University Course), the Schools of Applied Science and the Schools of
Fine Arts (courses leading to certificates) are held each year in Jan-
uary, June, and September. In 1908 they will be held January 20-27,
June 15—20, and September 14—21.
In June the examinations are those of the College Entrance Ex-
amination Board, of which Columbia University is a member. The
University accepts the numerical ratings of the Board, but fixes a
uniform passing mark for the several colleges and schools.
In January and September the examinations will be held only at
the University. The Board at present holds examinations only in
June.
While all persons taking tlie January examinations will receive due
credit for the results of the examinations, students may be admitted, at the
beginning of the second half-year, only to Columbia College and Barnard
College.
All correspondence with the College Entrance Examination Board,
all requests for its publications, etc., should be addressed to its Secre-
tary, Post-Office Sub-Station 84, New York, N. Y.
All correspondence with the University should be addressed to the
Secretary of the University.
APPLICATION FOR EXAMINATION
Every candidate for examination is required to file an application.
For the examinations in June, 1908, the application must be filed
with the Secretary of the College Entrance Examination Board.
Applications for examination in the United States East of the Mis-
sissippi River (also at Minneapolis, St. Louis, and other points on the
1=4
ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS 155
Mississippi River) must be filed on or before June 1. Applications
for examination elsewhere in the United States or in Canada must
be filed on or before May 25. Applications for examination outside of
the United States and Canada must be filed on or before May 11.
Requests for blank forms of application should be addressed to the
Secretary of the Board.
For the examinations in January and September, 1908, applications
should reach the Registrar of Columbia University on or before January
13, and September 7. Requests for blank forms of application should
be addressed to the Secretary of Columbia University and the Registrar
of Barnard College.
EXAMINATION FEE
Every application for examination in June must be accompanied
by a fee of $5 for all candidates examined at points in the United
States and Canada, and $15 for all candidates examined at points out-
side of the United States and Canada.
Every application for examination in January or September must
be accompanied either by a fee of $5, by a receipt from the Bursar for
an examination fee previously paid, or by the receipt issued by the
Secretary of the College Entrance Examination Board for the June
examinations immediately preceding. Tlie latter will be accepted in
either September or January, but not in both; and a single fee paid to the
University will cover only two consecutive series of examinations namely
January and September or September and January.
If a late application is accepted either by the College Entrance
Examination Board, or by the University, a second fee of $5 must be
paid.
The examination fee receipt should be carefully preserved. It
must be presented by the candidate to the Supervisor in charge of
the examinations which he attends as evidence that he is entitled to
be admitted to the same. No candidate will be admitted to the
January or September examinations upon the receipt of the Board,
unless that receipt bears the certification of the Registrar of Columbia
University that the candidate's application has been filed.
DIVISION OF EXAMINATION
A candidate may present himself at any of the scheduled series of
examinations subject to the following restrictions:
(1) He may not present himself at more than four series of ex-
aminations except by special consent of the Committee on
Admissions of the School which he purposes to enter.
(2) At the first and second series credit will be given only for
such subjects, or lettered (or numbered) parts of a subject
as are approved by his principal instructor.
i56
ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS
(3) The results of an examination shall stand to his credit for
twenty-eight months, but no longer.
PLACES OF EXAMINATION
In June 1908, entrance examinations will be held at a large number
of widely distributed points, a list of which will be published by the
Board about March 1. Requests for examinations at particular points,
should reach the Secretary of the Board not later than February 1 .
In January and September, 1908, examinations will be held only at
at the University
EXAMINATION SUBJECTS
Columbia University recognizes the following examination subjects
which may be offered for admission to one or more of the colleges and
schools included in the University, each subject counting for a specific
number of points as indicated below :
Musical Appreciation 1
Musical Performance > 2
Physiography
Shopwork l
Zoology
Intermediate French
German
Adv
English , 3
Elementary French 2
German 2
Greek 3
History 2
Italian ' 2
Latin 4
Mathematics. ... 3
Physics 1
Spanish 2
Botany 1
Chemistry 1
Drawing 1
Harmony 1
The combinations of subjects for admission to the several colleges
and schools are indicated in the pages devoted to each college or
school, under the heading Admission.
anced English • . . . .
Greek '
History ». . . .
Latin «
Mathematics.
Physics 1. . . .
SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS
The examination at Columbia University will be held as follows :
For men, in Earl Hall in January, and in the Gymnasium in June
and September.
For women in Barnard College in January, June, and September.
Candidates taking these examinations must report to the Supervisor,
in the examination room, fifteen minutes in advance of the first ex-
amination which they are to attend.
1 Candidates will be examined in this subject only in January and September.
SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS 157
Schedule
January 20-27, 1908, June 15-20, 1908
Monday, January 20 and June 15
Mathematics a, i, ii (Elementary Algebra: to Quadratics;
Quadratics, etc.) 9 . 30-12 . 30
History b (Mediaeval and Modern History) 1 . 30-3 . 30
History d (American History) 1 . 30-3 . 30
Physics (Elementary) 3 .45—5 .45
Botany 3 • 45~5 • 45
Zoology 3.45-5.45
Tuesday, January 21 and June 16
Mathematics c, d (Plane Geometry; Solid Geometry).. . 9-12
History a (Ancient History) 1 . 30-3 . 30
History c (English History) 1 . 30-3 . 30
German a (Elementary German) 3 .45-5 .45
Wednesday, January 22 and June 17
♦Shopwork (Written) 9-10 . 30
Latin b (Caesar) 9-10 .30
Latin in (Sight Translation) 10.45—12 .30
3°-3-3°
45-5-45
45-5-45
45-5-45
French a (Elementary French) 1
German b (Intermediate German) 3
Spanish 3
♦Italian 3
Thursday, January 23 and June 18
Latin c (Cicero) 9-1 1
Latin a (Grammar and Composition) 11. 1 5-12 . 30
Latin d (Vergil's ^Eneid, Books I-VI) 1 . 30-3 . 30
French b (Intermediate French) 3 .45-5 .45
Friday, January 24 and June ig
English a (Reading and Practice) 9—1 1
Latin I (Prose Composition) n. 1 5-12 . 30
English b (Study and Practice) 1 . 30-3 . 30
Chemistry 3 .45-5.45
Physiography 3 . 45-5 . 45
Greek c (Homer's Iliad, Books I— III) 3 .45-5 .45
Music b (Harmony) 3 .45-5 .45
Saturday, January 25 and June 20
Greek b (Xenophon) 9-1 1
Drawing 9-1 1.30
* Not offered in June.
158 SUBMISSION OF NOTE-BOOKS, ETC.
Greek a (Grammar and Composition) 11 . 15-12 .30
*Advanced History 1 . 30-3 . 30
Mathematics e (Trigonometry) 1 . 30-3 . 30
Greek g (Sight Translation) 1 . 30-3 . 30
Greek f (Prose Composition) 3 .45-5 .45
Music a (Musical Appreciation) 3 .45-5 .45
Monday, January 27
♦Shopwork (Laboratory) 10-12
♦Advanced English 9-12
♦Advanced Greek 9-12
♦Advanced Latin 1-4
♦Advanced Physics 1-4
SUBMISSION OF NOTE -BOOKS, DRAWINGS, ETC.
All work submitted must be duly certified to in ink by the teacher
in the following form :
"I certify that this is a true and original record of work actually
performed by while in attendance at during
the year 19
Instructor in
Drawings should bear a similar certification, or in case of work
not done under instruction should be accompanied by the candidate's
own signed declaration.
All note-books unless otherwise specified should be submitted at
the time for examination. Candidates desiring their return should
apply for the June examinations to the Secretary of the College En-
trance Examination Board; for the September and January examina-
tions, to the Secretary of the University.
English exercise books, submitted in lieu of examination, Ad-
vanced English essays, or Advanced History and Advanced Physics
note-books, should be sent to the Secretary of the University at least
two weeks before the examinations begin. Within ten days the candi-
date will be informed whether or not the work submitted has been
accepted. English exercise books will not be returned to the writers.
DEFINITIONS OF REQUIREMENTS '
(Specimens of the question papers set by Columbia University may
be obtained from the Secretary upon application. The question
papers set by the College Entrance Examination Board are published
annually in book form by Ginn & Company, Boston, Mass.)
* Not offered in June.
> The several subjects are stated in terms of units; the unit is a course of five
periods weekly throughout an academic year of the preparatory school ; the subjects
are assigned units in accordance with the time required to prepare adequately upon
them for college entrance.
DEFINITIONS OF REQUIREMENTS 159
The following abridged statements are intended merely to indicate
the general scope of the requirements. The official definition of each
requirement is printed in full in the Bulletin of Entrance Examinations
and any person who intends to take the examinations himself or to
prepare others for them, should procure this Bulletin. The current
edition of the Bulletin and specimen question papers may be obtained
from the Secretary of Columbia University upon application.
Botany (One point). (1) Structure and life history of 16 or more
types of representative families of plants, 10 of them seed plants.
(2) Elementary plant physiology. (3) Elementary natural
history (ecology of plants). Requiring one year of laboratory
and class-room instruction, for the course.
Chemistry 1 (One point). Preparation and properties of the common
elements and their important compounds.
Mastery of the more usual chemical terms and ability to make
simple calculations and explanations of chemical processes.
Preparation should include lectures and demonstrations, study
of standard elementary text-books, and forty or more laboratory
exercises.
Drawing > (One point). The ability to sketch free hand with
reasonable accuracy — (a) From dictation: Simple geometrical
figures; (b) From the object: A vase, household utensil, or other
familiar object; (c) From the copy: Enlarging or reducing simple
pieces of machinery or architectural or decorative detail. (At
least 20 freehand drawings must be submitted).
English (Three points), (a) Reading and Practice (This part of the
test may be fulfilled in whole or in part by an exercise book.)
(See page 15S). A test of training in English composition. A
list of the books prescribed for reading appears in the Bulletin,
(b) Study and Practice. The subject-matter, form and structure
of certain specified works, and incidentally English grammar
and English literary history. Prescribed for 1908 : — Julius Caesar ;
Lycidas; Comus; L' Allegro and II Penseroso; Burke on Concili-
ation ; Macaulay 's Addison and Life of Johnson. (For succeeding
years see Bulletin).
English, Advanced. (One point). The equivalent of English
A1-A2 (See page 84). (1) English composition, presupposing
the elements of rhetoric. (2) General history of English literature,
and selected works, (a list of which may be obtained from the
Secretary of the University) . Ten essays of at least 500 words
each must also be submitted. (See p. 158).
'A certified and indexed note-book must be submitted: (See p. 158).
160 DEFINITIONS OF REQUIREMENTS
French, Elementary. (Two points). Accurate pronunciation and
the ability to read at sight easy prose and to put into French
simple English sentences. The rudiments of the grammar, in-
volving all but the rare irregular verb forms and the simpler uses
of conditional and subjunctive. The preparation should include,
beside the mastery of a good elementary text-book, the reading
of 300-600 pp. of easy French.1
French, Intermediate. (One point). Additional reading, 400-600
pp. including dramatic works. Grammar completed. Further
drill in composition.
German, Elementary (Two points). Accurate pronunciation and
the ability to read easy dialogue and narrative prose, and a working
knowledge of grammar and composition adequate for the putting
into German of simple English sentences based upon a familiar
vocabulary. The preparation should include, beside the mastery
of a good elementary text-book, the reading of 150-200 pp. of
easy German.1
German, Intermediate (One point). Additional reading, 400 pp. of
moderately difficult prose and poetry. Further drill in grammar
and composition, with special reference to syntax.
Greek, Elementary (Three points). (a) 1 and 2. — Attic grammar
and elementary composition, based on Anabasis I— II. (b)
Anabasis I-IV. (c) Iliad I— III (except II 494-end) with tests
concerning constructions, poetic forms, and prosody, (f) Trans-
lation into Greek of simple continuous English prose, (g) Trans-
lation into English at sight of continuous Greek prose.
Greek, Advanced (One point). The equivalent of Greek 3-4 (see
p. 93) : at least 1 600 additional lines in Homer and eight orations
of Lysias. 2 Also at least twenty exercises in writing connected
narrative Greek prose.
History, Elementary (Two points, i. e., a and b, or c and d, or (for
Applied Science) one point, i. e., a or b or c or d.) Either (a)
Ancient, beginning with brief study of Oriental peoples and com-
ing down to the death of Charlemagne, with reference to art, lit-
erature, and government, (b) from 800 on including growth of
the State system, (c) English history, including social and politi-
cal developments, (d) American history with the elements of
civil government.
Each field may best be covered by an accurate text-book of
300 pp. plus, say, 300 pp. of selected supplementary reading.
1 A list of the reading recommended will be found in the Bulletin.
2 For information concerning possible substitutions, see Bulletin.
DEFINITIONS OF REQUIREMENTS 161
History, Advanced ' (One point). (To be taken in the group not
offered for Elementary History). Equivalent to History A1-A2.
(See page 96 ). Supplementary reading emphasizing the
significance of historical phenomena. The candidate must present
at least 5000 words of notes on each historical field offered, and
show practice in making historical parallels, in preparing digests
of outside reading, and in the use of historical maps.
Italian, Elementary (Two points). The requirement corresponds
to that in Elementary French. (See p. 160).
Latin, Elementary (Four points, i.e., a, c, d, 1, and m, or two points,
i.e., a and either c or d, or (except for Columbia College and
Barnard College) and Schools of Music and Design (courses leading
to a certificate in Music or Design) b. (a) i and ii — Elementary
grammar and prose composition, (b) Any four books of Caesar's
Gallic War, preferably I-IV. (c) Cicero, any six orations, prefer-
ably the four orations against Catiline, Archias, and the Manil-
ian Law. (d) Vergil. The JEneid I-VI, with incidental prosody.
(1) Translation into Latin of simple continuous English prose,
(m) Translation into English at sight of continuous Latin prose.
Latin, Advanced (One point). Equivalent to Latin A1-A2. (See
page 100). Horace, Odes Bks. I and III, with incidental prosody,
and Livy, Bk. XXI and Chapters 41-53 Bk. XXII. 2 Twenty
exercises from Part I of Gildersleeve and Lodge's Prose Com-
position.
Mathematics, Elementary (Three points). (a) Elementary alge-
bra, including — i., the four fundamental operations for rational
expressions, and such topics as lowest common multiple, ratio
and proportion, linear equations radicals, fractional and negative
exponents; ii. Quadratic equations, arithmetic and geometric
progressions, the binomial theorem for positive integral exponents,
the use of graphical methods, (b) Plane Geometry — original
exercises, loci, mensuration of lines and plane surfaces.
Mathematics, Advanced (One point). (d) Solid geometry, original
exercises, loci problems, mensuration of surfaces and solids,
(e) Trigonometry, the principal formulas, simple equations and
triangles, theory and use of logarithms (without infinite series).
Music. Note — A candidate for admission to Columbia College may
offer either a or b. A candidate for admission to the School of
Music (courses leading to a certificate in Music) may offer either
a or b or both — with or without the addition of Musical Per-
formance.
1 A certified note-book must be submitted. (See p. 158).
2 For information as to possible substitutions, see Bulletin.
1 62 DEFINITIONS OF REQUIREMENTS
(a) Musical Appreciation (not involving ability to perform
nor to read from printed music) (one point), (i) the principal
musical forms and tbeir historical development, (2) the lives
and environment of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert and
Chopin, and five other composers; (3) familiarity with certain
compositions designated in Bulletin.
(b) Harmony (One point). The elements of simple harmo-
nization.
(c) Musical Performance (Two points). The candidate should
communicate with the School of Music regarding this require-
ment.
Physics 1 (One point). The most important facts and laws in ele-
mentary physics. Preparation should include the mastery of a
standard text-book supplemented by numerical problems, in-
struction by lecture with demonstrations and individual labora-
tory exercises — say mechanics, 13; sound, 3; heat, 5; light, 6 ;
electricity, 8.
Physics, Advanced ' (One point). Equivalent to Physics 3-4 (see
page 137). Requires 30 additional and more advanced ex-
periments.
Physiography ' + 4 (One point). Preparation includes modern text-
books and at least forty individual laboratory and field exercises,
say, earth as a globe, 5 ; ocean, 5 ; atmosphere, 12 ; land, 18.
Shopwork (One point). Involving in each subject 180 laboratory
hours, examination, both written and practical, on the use and
structure of tools, nature of shop processes, methods of construc-
tion, and properties of materials. Authenticated models may be
presented as evidence of technical skill.
The candidate may offer either (a) Woodwork — i. joinery,
ii. turning and patternmaking, or (b) Forging, or (c) Machine-
work.
Spanish, Elementary (Two points). The requirements correspond
to that in elementary French, see page 160.
Zoology1 (One point). Laboratory and field study, supplemented
by text-book and further reading. (1) General natural history
of common American animal types. (2) Classification of animals
into phyla and leading classes. (3) Structure of typical animals —
say, frog or fish, decapod, earthworm, hydra, protozoon. (4)
Physiology of the types studied and comparison of life- processes
1 A certified and indexed note-book must be submitted. (See p. 158).
4 This corresponds to the subject called Geography by the College Entrance
Examination Board.
DEFINITIONS OF REQUIREMENTS 163
of animals and plants. (5 and 6) (in a very elementary way)
reproduction, embryology and (optional) elements of cytology.
(7) optional biological history.
REGULATIONS FOR THE DEGREES OF
MASTER OF ARTS AND DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
Note. — Attention is particularly called to the separately printed pamphlet entitled
" Instruction for Graduate Students."
i. Candidates for the degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of Phi-
losophy must hold a baccalaureate degree in arts, letters, philosophy,
or science, or an engineering degree, or an education equivalent to
that represented by one of these degrees, such equivalence to be passed
upon in every case by the Standing Committee on Higher Degrees.
Every candidate for a higher degree must present to the Dean of
each school in which he intends to study satisfactory evidence that he
is qualified for the studies he desires to undertake.
2. Candidates for the degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of
Philosophy must pursue their studies in residence for a minimum
period of one and two years, respectively.1 The year spent in study
for the degree of Master of Arts is credited on account of the require-
ment for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Residence at other uni-
versities may be credited to a candidate. In certain cases and by
special arrangement, time exclusively devoted to investigation in the
field will be credited in partial fulfilment of the requirement of resi-
dence. No degree will be conferred upon any student who has not
been in residence at Columbia Univers'ty for at least one year. The
satisfactory completion, at not less than four Summer Sessions or
two consecutive Summer Sessions and the half-year intervening or
following, of courses of instruction having in all a value of eight hours'
work a week for one academic year will be accepted as fulfilling the
minimum requirement of one year's university residence.
3. Each student who declares himself a candidate for the degrees
of Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy, or either of them, shall
designate one principal or major subject and two subordinate or minor
subjects.
Candidates are expected to devote at least one half of their time
throughout their course of study to the major subject. In the case of
laboratory courses this implies two days a week, or its equivalent, as
determined by each department. Each minor subject is intended to
occupy approximately one fourth of the time during one year for the
degree of Master of Arts, and during two years for the degree of Doctor
of Philosophy.
1 In practice three years of university residence subsequent to the attainment of
the Bachelor's degree, or its equivalent, are usually necessary to obtain the degree'of
Doctor of Philosophy.
164
REGULATIONS FOR THE UNIVERSITY DEGREES 165
When a candidate in his choice of subjects under any Faculty
designates a subject as his major and first minor, no subdivision of that
general subject may be chosen by him as a second minor, except that,
by special vote of the Committee on Higher Degrees, upon the recom-
mendation of the Dean and the head of the department concerned, a
candidate may choose all of his subjects under one department.
Minor subjects may not be changed except by permission of the
Dean, to be given only on the written recommendation of the heads of
the departments concerned; major subjects may not be changed
except by a special vote of the Faculty in each case.
The professor in charge of the major subject and the Dean of the
Faculty under which that subject lies shall pass upon the student's
qualifications for the course of study he desires to pursue and shall
approve his choice of subjects before registration can be effected.
4. The subjects from which the candidate's selection must be made
Under the Faculty of Political Science
Group I. — History and political philosophy: 1. Ancient and oriental
history; 2. mediaeval history; 3. modern European history from
the opening of the 16th century; 4. American history; 5. political
philosophy.
Group II. — Public law and comparative jurisprudence: 1. Consti-
tutional law; 2. international law; 3. administrative law; 4. com-
parative jurisprudence.
Group III. — Economics and social science : 1. Political economy and
finance; 2. sociology and statistics; 3. social economy.
In his choice of subjects under this Faculty, the candidate whose
major subject lies within its jurisdiction is limited by the following
rules:
A candidate for the degree of Master of Arts or Doctor of Philosophy
must select one minor subject outside of the group which includes his
major subject.
A candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy must select one
minor subject within the group which includes his major subject.
To be recognized as a major subject for the degree of Master of Arts,
the courses selected must aggregate at least two hours per week,
throughout the year, and must also include attendance at a seminar.
For a minor subject for the degree of Master of Arts the attendance at a
seminar is not required.
Similarly, a major subject for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
involves at least four hours per week, together with attendance at
a seminar for two years (provided that this number of hours be offered
in the subject), and a minor subject for the same degree involves two
hours weekly in addition to the requirements for the degree of Master
of Arts.
1 66 REGULATIONS FOR THE UNIVERSITY DEGREES
Under the Faculty of Philosophy
I Major Subjects: i. Philosophy; 2. psychology; 3. anthropology;
4. education; 5. linguistics; 6. comparative literature; 7. classical
archaeology and epigraphy; 8. Greek language and literature, and,
incidentally, Grecian history; 9. Latin language and literature, and,
incidentally, Roman history; and the following, including in each
case the study of both the language and the literature: 10. English;
11. Germanic; 12. Romance; 13. Sanskrit (with Pali) and Iranian;
14. Semitic; 15. Chinese. Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14,
and 15 count each as the equivalent of a major and one minor subject.
II. Minor Subjects: 1. Philosophy; 2. psychology; 3. anthropology ;
4. education; 5. linguistics; 6. comparative literature; 7. Greek;
8. Greek archaeology; 9. Latin; 10. Roman archaeology; 11. San-
skrit; 12. Iranian; 13. English; 14. Anglo-Saxon; 15. Gothic; 16.
Germanic philology; 17. German language and literature; 18. Scan-
dinavian languages and literatures; 19. Romance philology; 20.
French language and literature; 21. Spanish language and literature;
22. Italian language and literature; 23. Hebrew; 24. Arabic; 25.
Assyrian; 26. Syriac; 27. Ethiopic; 28. Semitic epigraphy; 29.
Turkish; 30. Armenian; 31. Chinese; 32. Coptic; 33. Celtic; 34. com-
parative religion.
A candidate for the degree of Master of Arts or Doctor of Phi-
losophy may, with the consent of the Dean of the Faculty, of the heads
of the departments concerned, and of the professor in charge of his
major subject, select both minor subjects within the same department,
and may divide a minor subject, taking parts of two subjects germane
to his major subject.
Under the Faculty of Pure Science
1. Anatomy; 2. astronomy; 3. bacteriology; 4. botany; 5. chem-
istry; 6. civil and sanitary engineering; 7. electrical engineering; 8
geodesy; 9. geology; 10. mathematics; 11. mechanical engineering;
12. mechanics and electro-mechanics ; 13. metallurgy; 14. mineralogy;
15. mining; 16. palaeontology ; 17. physics; 18. physiological chem-
istry; 19. physiology; 20. zoology.
No two of the subjects selected may be in any one department, un-
less by previous consent of the Faculty. A minor subject may be
taken in the same department as the major, but no two minors may
be taken in the same department, unless the consent of the Faculty
shall have first been obtained.
5. Each student is given a registration-book, which shall be signed
by the professor or instructor in charge of each course of instruction or
investigation at the beginning and end of the course. Before present-
ing himself for examination for any degree, the student shall submit
his registration-book to the Dean of the Faculty in which his major
REGULATIONS FOR THE UNIVERSITY DEGREES 167
subject lies in order that the Dean may satisfy himself that the required
minimum number of courses has been attended.
6. (a) Students desiring to be examined for the degree of Master of
Arts, Master of Laws, or Doctor of Philosophy must make
application to the Registrar of the University, on blanks
provided by the University, on or before April 1 of the aca-
demic year in which the examination is desired.
(b) The Registrar thereupon shall notify the Deans of the Fac-
ulties concerned of the name of each such student, together
with the subjects which he offers and the degree for which he
is a candidate.
(c) The examination shall be held under the authority and
direction of the several Deans.
(d) The results of such examinations shall be reported as soon as
possible to the Registrar, who shall transmit to the Secretary
of the University Council the complete record of each suc-
cessful candidate.
7. Each candidate for the degree of Master of Arts, not later than
May 1 of the academic year in which the examination is to take place,
shall present an essay on some topic previously approved by the
professor in charge of his major subject. The Faculty of Political
Science requires this essay to be a paper read during the year before
the seminar of which the candidate is a member.
When the essay has been approved, the candidate shall file with the
Registrar two legibly written or typewritten copies on firm, strong
paper, eleven by eight and a half inches in size with an inner margin
of one and a half inches. The title-page shall contain the words :
"Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of
Master of Arts, in the Faculty of , Columbia University."
8. Each candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy shall pre-
sent a dissertation embodying the result of original investigation and
research on some topic previously approved by the professor in charge
of the major subject. When such dissertation has been approved by
the said professor, it shall be printed by the candidate, under the
direction of the Dean of the Faculty, and one hundred and fifty copies
shall be delivered to the Registrar unless, for reasons of weight, a
smaller number be accepted by special action of the University Council.
On the title-page of every such dissertation shall be printed the words :
" Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree
of Doctor of Philosophy, in the Faculty of , Columbia
University."
Each dissertation shall contain upon its title-page the full name of
the author; the full title of the dissertation; the year of imprint, and,
if a reprint, the title, volume, and pagination of the publication from
which it was reprinted; and there shall be printed and appended to
1 68 REGULATIONS FOR THE UNIVERSITY DEGREES
each dissertation a statement of the educational institutions that the
author has attended, and a list of the degrees and honors conferred
upon him, as well as the titles of his previous publications.
All dissertations for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy must be sub-
mitted for approval not later than April i of the academic year in
which examination is desired.
In the Faculty of Political Science, the examination on the major
and minor subjects and on languages, but not on the dissertation
itself, may be held before the printed dissertation is submitted.
In the Faculties of Philosophy and Pure Science, the disserta-
tion is not required to be printed until after the examination of the
candidate.
The Faculty of Pure Science requires the dissertation to be printed
in the size and form of the Annals, or the Memoirs, of the New York
Academy of Sciences, according to the nature of the subject.
9. No candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy is admitted
to examination except on the recommendation of the professor who
has approved the topic selected for the dissertation, indorsed by the
professors in charge of the major and minor subjects. Every candidate
must pass, besides such other examinations as the Faculty in charge
of the major subject may require, an oral examination on all three
subjects, and must defend the dissertation in the presence of that
Faculty, or of so many of its members as may desire or as may be
designated to attend.
The general examination for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
will not be confined to the courses which the candidate has attended
in Columbia University or elsewhere, nor even to the field covered by
such courses. The candidate is expected to show a satisfactory grasp
of his major subject as a whole and a general acquaintance with the
broader field of knowledge of which this subject forms a part.
The ability to read at sight French and German, to be certified in
each case by the Dean of the Faculty concerned, is required by all the
Faculties.
In the Faculty of Political Science, the candidate must also show
that he is able to read ordinary Latin, unless it shall have been pre-
viously certified by the professor, or professors, in charge of the major
subject that ability to use this language is not necessary for the proper
prosecution of the candidate's researches. On application to the
Dean, the candidate may be examined on the required languages one
year before presenting himself for the general examination on his
major and minor subjects. If no such application be made, he will
be examined on the languages in connection with the general examina-
tion on these subjects.
In the Faculty of Philosophy, admission as a regular student or as a
candidate for the degree of Master of Arts does not admit to candidacy
for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Only those students are ad-
REGULATIONS FOR THE UNIVERSITY DEGREES 169
mitted to candidacy for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy who (1) are
recommended for such candidacy by the heads of the departments in
which their major and minor subjects of study lie; (2) are certified
as to their ability to read French and German by the heads of those
departments; (3) are certified as to their ability to read Latin by
the head of that department, provided that students whose major
subject is psychology, anthropology, or education, shall not be re-
quired to meet this test when it is certified by the professor in charge
of their major subject that an ability to read Latin is not necessary for
the proper prosecution of their researches. The examinations in Latin,
French, and German shall be passed at least one academic year before
the candidate presents himself for the degree.
10. Students holding the required first degree who are primarily
registered in a professional school of Columbia University, or in an
allied professional school, may be registered as candidates for the
higher degrees in the Faculty of Political Science, the Faculty of
Philosophy, or the Faculty of Pure Science. In such a case the candi-
date must take his major subject under one of these Faculties, and
must conform to all its rules as regards examinations, essay, and disser-
tation; but he may offer, as the equivalent of the two minor subjects,
such of his professional courses as may be approved for that purpose
by the Dean of the faculty under which the major subject is taken and
by the Committee on Higher Degrees.
11. No student shall continue to be a candidate for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy for a longer period than three years from the
time he ceases to be in residence, nor for a longer period than six years
from the time of his initial registration for a higher degree.
Master of Laws
1 . Any student who has satisfactorily completed 94 points including
all prescribed work in Columbia College, or in some other college main-
taining an equivalent curriculum (every such case of equivalency to
be considered on its own merit), shall be entitled to be recommended
for the degree of Master of Laws upon certificates from the Faculty
of Law and the Faculty of Political Science that he has satisfac-
torily completed a four-years' course of study under said Faculties.
2 . Every candidate for the degree of Master of Laws must elect from
the subjects offered by said Faculties courses aggregating, in the four
years, fifty-two hours per week, and must pass satisfactory examina-
tions upon the subjects elected; provided that not more than thirty-
four hours of work may be elected either in the field of private
law, or in that of public law, social ethics, history, and economics.
3. Students, otherwise qualified, who have received the degree of
Bachelor of Laws from this University after pursuing the full course of
study, shall be entitled, upon pursuing for an additional year a course
170 REGULATIONS FOR THE UNIVERSITY DEGREES
of study of at least thirteen hours per week, under either or both of said
Faculties, and passing satisfactory examinations therein, to receive the
degree of Master of Laws; provided that no student shall receive the
degree who has not studied and passed satisfactory examinations in
comparative constitutional law, administrative law, Roman law, inter-
national law, and in the three courses offered on equity,1 and who has
not pursued here, or elsewhere, courses of instruction satisfactory to
the Faculty of Political Science in history, social ethics, and economics.
4. Each Faculty shall determine the order in which the subjects
offered by it shall be taken, and the maximum amount of work to be
done therein during any one year.
5. Students from other universities, colleges, or law schools, who
shall have satisfactorily completed a course of study equivalent to at
least one term of thirteen hours per week in the subjects indicated in
Section 2, after receiving a bachelor's degree, may be excused from the
corresponding number of terms of the four-years' residence required at
Columbia, provided that in no case shall any one receive the degree of
Master of Laws who has not spent at least four years in the study of
the said subject in some university, college, or law school; and the
decision whether work at another institution shall be accepted as
equivalent to work at Columbia shall rest, so far as the studies under
the Faculty of Law are concerned, with the Faculty of Law, and, so far
as the studies under the Faculty of Political Science are concerned,
with the Faculty of Political Science. But neither Faculty shall admit
a student from another university, college, or law school to examina-
tion for the degree of Master of Laws without a residence of at least one
year in this University.
1 Under this provision students would be allowed, but not required, to take history
of European law, conflicts of law, law of municipal corporations, and the law of
taxation.
«!«-' .57UEF.T
18
V ig
ITjO
tWtl
1tOW 3TREELT
HA'? -STRTUT
l I PROPOSES 0LH.DVCS
Columbia university i
iOTYor HEW YORK
0 50 100 150 200
1.
Library
11.
Barnard College
21.
Brooks
2
East
12.
Teachers College
22.
Journalism
8.
Fayerweather
13.
Mines
23.
Kent
4.
Schermerhorn
14.
St. Paul's Chapel
24.
Women's Recreation Ground
■ >.
Havemeyer
15.
Hartley
25.
Hand-Ball Courts
B.
Engineering
16.
Livingston
26.
Tennis Courts
..
L niversity
IT.
Hamilton
27.
Domestic Economy
-.
West
18.
Horace Mann School
28.
Peabody Greenhouse
9.
Earl
19.
Physical Education
29.
Observatories
1),
Faculty Club
20.
Women's Dormitory
30.
Model House
COLUMBIA COLLEGE
Officers of the Faculty
Ex-Officio Members of the University Council
J. H. Van Amringe, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D Dean
Henry Bedinger Mitchell, E.E., A.M Secretary
Standing Committees
On the Program of Studies: The Dean, chairman, Professors
Peck, Cohn, Kemp Hallock, Lord. Hervey.
On Admissions: Professors Hervey, chairman, Mitchell, Tufts.
On Scholarships: The Dean, cluiirman, Professors Odell, Shotwell.
On Honors: Professors G. R. Carpenter, chairman, Seager, Shepherd.
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D., (Cantab.) Litt.D. (Oxon.)
President
J. Howard Van Amringe, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D Professor of
ExprRES Mathematics, and Dean
1908 Edwin R. A. Seligman, Ph.D., LL.D McVickar Professor of
Political Economy
1910 Harry T. Peck, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D. . .Anthon Professor of the Latin
Language and Literature
1909 Edward Delavan Perry, Ph.D., LL.D Jay Professor of Greek
1908 William A. Dunning, Ph.D., LL.D Lieber Professor of History
and Political Philosophy
1909 Adolphe Cohn, LL.B., A.M Professor of the Romance Languages
and Literatures
1909 James F. Kemp, E.M., Sc.D Professor of Geology
1908 William Hallock, Ph.D Professor of Physics
1910 George R. Carpenter, D.C.L Professor of Rhetoric and
English Composition
1909 James C. Egbert, Ph.D Professor of Latin
1909 Calvin Thomas, LL.D . . .Gebhard Professor of the Germanic Languages
and Literatures
1910 James Hulme Canfield, LL.D., Litt.D. (Oxon.) Librarian of the
University
1909 Herbert Gardiner Lord, A.M Professor of Philosophy
171
172 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
TERM
EXPIRES
1908 Nelson Glenn McCrea, Ph.D Professor of Latin
1 910 Clarence H. Young, Ph.D Professor of Greek
1909 Livingston Farrand, A.M., M.D Professor of Anthropology
1910 James Maclay, C. E., Ph.D Professor of Mathematics
1908 Marston T. Bogert, Ph.B Professor of Organic Chemistry
1909 George Clinton Densmore Odell, Ph.D Professor of English
1910 Henry Rogers Seager, Ph.D Professor of Political Economy
1910 Frederick J. E. Woodbridge, A.M., LL.D.. .Johnsonian Professor of
Philosophy
1909 Gary N. Calkins, Ph.D Professor of Protozoology
1908 Cassius Jackson Keyser, Ph.D Adrain Professor of Mathematics
1908 George L. Meylan, A.M., M.D Adjunct Professor of Physical
Education
1909 William Addison Hervey, A.M.. . .Adjunct Professor of the Germanic
Languages and Literatures
1909 Rudolf Tombo, Jr., Ph.D Adjunct Professor of the Germanic
Languages and Literatures
1 910 William R. Shepherd, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of History
1 910 Frank L. Tufts, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Physics
1908 James T. Shotwell, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of History
1 910 George W. Botsford, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of History
1 910 Robert S. Woodworth, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Psychology
1908 Henry B. Mitchell, A.M Adjunct Professor of Mathematics
1908 Curtis Hidden Page, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of the Romance
Languages and Literatures
1908 Daniel Jordan, B.S., Pd.B Adjunct Professor of the Romance
Languages and Literatures
1908 James Howard McGregor, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Zoology
1908 Charles A. Beard, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Politics
1909 Carlton Clarence Curtis, Ph.D Instructor in Botany
1909 S. Alfred Mitchell, Ph.D Instructor in Astronomy
ADMISSION
Candidates are admitted by the Committee on Admissions under
the following regulations:
Except for reasons of weight, candidates for admission to the
Freshman class must be at least fifteen years of age at the time of
matriculation, and correspondingly older for admission to advanced
standing. Each candidate must before admission present a certificate
of good moral character from his last teacher or from some citizen of
good standing. Students from other colleges or universities must
bring certificates of honorable dismission.
All requests for information regarding admission should be ad-
dressed to the Secretary of the University.
ADMISSION 173
To the Freshman Class
Every candidate must offer at the entrance examinations (see below)
subjects amounting to fifteen "points." The point here represents
the number of years, at the rate of five periods a week, which will
normally be required in the secondary school to prepare adequately
for the college examination.
The candidate must offer
COUNTING
IN POINTS
English 3
Elementary Mathematics 3
and in the case of candidates for the A.B. degree
Elementary Latin 4
or, beginning June, iqo8, in the case of candidates for B.S.
degree either Elementary Latin 4
f Chemistry 1
or X Elementary Physics 1
(^ Intermediate or Advanced subjects 2
The candidate may offer any of the following subjects
without other restriction than that to offer an advanced
subject will involve offering either at the same time or
earlier the corresponding elementary subject:
Elementary Greek 3
Elementary History 2
Drawing 1
Music 1
Intermediate French 1
Intermediate German 1
Advanced English 1
Advanced Greek 1
Advanced History 1
Advanced Latin 1
Advanced Mathematics 1
Advanced Physics 1
and in the case of candidates for the B.S. degree
Elementary Latin (See note, page 161) 4 or 2
The candidate may offer not more than 4 points in all
from the four subjects following:
Elementary French 2
Elementary German 2
Italian 2
Spanish 2
The candidate may offer not more than 3 points in all
from the six subjects following:
Elementary Physics 1
174 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
COUNTING
IN POINTS
Chemistry i
Botany i
Physiography i
Shopwork i
Zoology i
For full definition of the above requirements and for information
regarding the times and places at which entrance examinations are
held, regulations regarding division of examinations, examinations
outside of New York, application blank, and examination fee, see
page 154.
Acceptance of Certificates
Columbia College accepts, in lieu of its entrance examinations, no
credentials of any sort except the Regents' Academic Diploma, the
Regents' Collegiate Entrance Diploma (for details see the Announce-
ment of Columbia College) , and the certificates of approved colleges,
and these only for the subjects which they specifically cover.
Certificates of the preparatory or high-school departments of
universities and colleges are not accepted.
Candidates must take the regular entrance examinations in the
subjects in which their certificates are not deemed adequate.
All certificates so offered must be received by the College Committee
on Admissions at least one week before the first day of the entrance
examinations.
To Advanced Standing
Candidates for admission to advanced standing upon the basis of
certificates from other colleges must fill out the appropriate applica-
tion blank, to be obtained from the Secretary of the University, and
file it with the Committee on Admissions one week before the first
day of the September or January entrance examinations. Each can-
didate must also present, at that time, an official transcript of his
academic record, together with a marked catalogue of the institution
that he leaves.
Candidates for admission to the Freshman class offering for en-
trance more than the required 15 points receive credit for this extra
work toward a degree, on a basis to be determined by the Com-
mittee on Admissions; but not more than 18 of the 124 points required
for a degree may be made in this way.
To Special Courses
Special courses are offered to young men of good character, at least
eighteen years of age, who wish without reference to any degree to
make a serious study of any subject or group of subjects. Such men
are designated "non-matriculated students," and are expected to ful-
fil the requirements for admission to the Freshman class (see page
PROGRAM OF STUDIES 175
172). Applications must be made, on blanks to be obtained from
the Secretary of the University, at least one week before the entrance
examinations begin.
Except for reasons of weight no one will be admitted as a special
student, who, within ten months of the time of his application, has
been refused admission, or has failed in his work, as a candidate for a
degree.
Persons who wish to pursue merely elementary subjects, such as
may be offered for admission, are not received as non-matriculated
students.
Applications from men of maturity who have been several years out
of school or college, and have had a valuable educative experience in
practical life, will be considered on their merits.
On Probation
Every Freshman admitted conditionally will be held under probation
during the first half-year of residence. Not later than the end of this
period, the Dean, on the basis of reports from the head of each de-
partment in which the student is registered, will decide whether he
shall be admitted to full standing, have his period of probation ex-
tended, or be dropped from the roll. The mark C, B, or A, obtained
in any subject at the end of the first half-year of residence, will be re-
garded as removing an entrance condition in that subject, unless the
condition was incurred in a part of the subject not directly involved
in the work of the college course. Any condition not so removed
must be satisfied by formal examination.
Registration and Fees
(See page 26)
Scholarships
(See p. 398.)
THE PROGRAM OF STUDIES
The time within which a curriculum, leading to the degree of
Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science, may be completed varies with
the capability and industry of the individual student. In most cases,
perhaps, four years will be spent in making the required number of
points; students of ability and industry may complete the course in
three years, or conceivably in even less time, especially if advantage
be taken of courses in the Summer Session, or additional credit be
gained by high standing; but no student may spend more than six
years as a candidate for a degree.
The principles of the program of studies are as follows:
176 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
1. The requirement for graduation is 124 points, the term "point"
signifying the satisfactory completion of work requiring attendance
one hour a week for one half-year.
2. Studies are either "prescribed," i. e., obligatory upon all candi-
dates for degrees; or "elective," i. e., to be taken (with certain restric-
tions) at the pleasure of the student.
3. Prescribed studies must be taken as far as practicable during the
first two years of residence; and subjects taken in College which are
continuations of subjects offered at entrance must be taken as far
as possible in the first year.
4. Other courses than those specified under each half-year may be
taken by students qualified to pursue them with advantage, but only
with the consent of the Dean.
5. No combination of courses amounting to less than 12 or more
than 19 points may be made in any half-year without the consent of
the Dean.
6. At least 9 points, exclusive of prescribed work, must be made
under some one department before graduation.
7. Admission to courses depends strictly upon completion of the
prerequisites as stated for each course separately. In all cases the
requirements as to prerequisites for any course must be completed
before the beginning of the half-year in which that course is given.
Where no prerequisite is stated the course may be taken and counted
for a degree by any student of the College.
8. Attention is called to the regulation that courses numbered above
100 are open to those students only who have completed 64 points in
college residence, including all prescribed work, except Philosophy A
and two half-year courses in Science.
9. To be recommended for a degree, a student must have made at
least 84 points in actual college residence, and of these at least 24 in
Columbia College. (The Faculty has power to suspend this rule in
individual cases; but a Statute of the University forbids the granting
of a degree to any person who has not been a member of the Univer-
sity for a full academic year, *. e., two half-years.)
Prescribed Courses
Unless the equivalents have been offered for admission, the following
courses are prescribed:
COUNTING
IN POINTS
English A and B 10
French A and B, or German A and B 12
History A1 6
1 Students who pass the entrance examinations in ancient, mediaeval, and modern
history -will be allowed to take a special examination on the same periods based on
the requirements of History A1-A2. If they satisfy this test, they will be permitted
PROGRAM OF STUDIES 177
COUNTING
IN POINTS
Latin A or Greek 3-4 (required only of candidates
for A.B. degree 6
Mathematics A 6
Philosophy A 6
Physical Education A and B 4
Natural Science A (elementary Chemistry and ele-
mentary Physics) 8
Botany, Chemistry, Geology, Physics, Psychology
(Experimental) , or Zoology : two half-year courses
(required only of candidates for A.B. degree) 6
Anthropology, Astronomy, Botany, Chemistry, Geol-
ogy (including Mineralogy), Mathematics, Mechan-
ics, Physics, Psychology, or Zoology: four half-year
courses in one or more of these subjects, in all
(required only of candidates for B.S. degree) 12
Options in the Professional Schools
The following provisions apply alike to all candidates for a degree:
When 72 points (including all prescribed work) have been made in
Columbia College, a student who wishes to enter upon his professional
studies before graduation from the College may exercise one of the
following options:
(a) He may take the studies of the first year of the Schools of
Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry (unless he is able to gain ad-
vanced standing in one of those schools), provided the courses
previously taken by him fulfil the requirements for admission to
those schools; and may receive the degree of A.B. or B.S. upon the
satisfactory completion of two years' work in a professional course.
(b) He may take the studies of the First Year of the College of
Physicians and Surgeons, provided he has previously taken in
college at least one course in Chemistry, one in Physics, and one
in Zoology; and may receive the degree of A.B. or B.S. upon
the satisfactory completion of two years' work in this profes-
sional course.
(c) He may take the studies of the First Year of the professional
course of Teachers College; and may receive the degree of A.B.
or B.S. upon the satisfactory completion of two years' work in
this professional course.
(d) He may take the studies of the First Year in the School of Fine
Arts, provided the courses previously taken by him fulfil the re-
quirements for admission to that school; and may receive the
to substitute for History A1-A2, as the prescribed work, any course in history num-
bered less than 100, provided that the total number of points of credit attached to the
course be not less than six.
178 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
degree of A.B. or B.S. upon the satisfactory completion of two
years' work in a professional course.
When 94 points (including all prescribed work) have been made,
and of these not less than 72 in Columbia College, the student may
take the studies of the First Year of the School of Law ; and may
receive the degree of A.B. or B.S. upon the satisfactory completion
of one year's work in this professional course.
The professional schools of the University strongly recommend
students to take advantage of the opportunity here given for pre-
liminary training. For particulars as to these several options the
announcement of the proper professional school should be consulted.
A student who exercises any one of the options here mentioned con-
tinues to be a student of Columbia College and subject to the authority
of its Dean, as long as he remains a candidate for the College degree.
Additional Credit for High Standing
At the end of every half-year additional credit for high standing is
given as follows:
The mark A in any two courses (no course being counted twice)
entitles the student to one point of extra credit, provided he has not
fallen below the mark B in any of the courses pursued by him during
the half-year.
Any student who is credited with 94 points (including all prescribed
work) may receive one point of extra credit for each of two courses
chosen from among those offered by any single department as counting
toward a higher degree (see page 164), provided the quality of his work
in such course be tested by an essay for which a mark of A or B
is given, in addition to the stated examinations. No student may
"receive more than one point of extra credit in one half-year under the
terms of this rule.
The Announcement of Columbia College gives specific examples of
the operations of these regulations.
Choice of Electives
For recommendations in regard to the choice of elective studies,
the reader is referred to the Announcement of Columbia College for
1907-08.
Examinations in Course
Two examinations are held every year in all courses, one begin-
ning on the last Wednesday but one of the first half-year (January
22, 1908), and the other either on the Monday of the second week
preceding Commencement for candidates for graduation (May 11, 1908),
or for other students of the college on the Thursday after Commence-
ment (May 27, 1908). These, and these only, are the stated examinations.
HONORS 179
No student who has been absent from more than ten per cent, of
the exercises in any course during a single half-year is entitled to
attend the stated examination in that course. Each instance of
tardiness is counted as half an absence.
Should a student not exceed the limit of absence allowed, no ex-
planation of any of his absences is required: should he exceed the
limit allowed in any course, he is debarred from the stated examina-
tion in that course, and can attend it only by consent of the Dean,
given after written explanation to him of every absence.
Every student is expected and required to keep an account of his
absences, and any satisfactory explanation of them must be from
records made at the times of their occurrence, and for dates noted
by the student himself and not obtained by him from the instructor
in charge.
For the regulations as to the taking of special examinations, which
include delinquent examinations, see the separately printed Announce-
ment of Columbia College for 1907-08.
Grades and Credit
A student who receives a mark of F in any prescribed course must
repeat that course ; in any course not prescribed he may present him-
self for re-examination at the stated time but on passing such examina-
tion he may receive only a mark of D. In either case, however, if the
mark of F was given by reason of absence from examination resulting
from illness or other unavoidable cause, he may be examined by per-
mission of the Dean and marked as though he had attended the regular
examination.
In any half-year not more than one course, whether prescribed or
elective, in which the student is marked D, may be counted toward a
degree. Of several courses in which he is marked D he may choose
the one to be so counted.
HONORS
Honors are of three kinds: departmental, divisional, and general.
Departmental honors will be granted in any year in any depart-
ment for high excellence, indicated by the grade A obtained in courses
_. , aggregating at least twelve points, and by the satisfactory
Departmental . ° . ,. J „ J
performance of additional assigned work. Students must
announce their candidacy to the head of the department not later
than the first of April of the year of candidacy.
Except by special decision of the Committee on Honors, no student
falling below C in any course taken by him during the year of candi-
dacy will receive honors.
A student who has won honors in any department successively
180 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
during the last three years of his college residence will be granted at
graduation highest final honors in that department.
On completion of the number of points required for a degree stu-
dents whose curriculum has been under the direction of some one
division may be recommended to the Faculty by that division for
final honors in such subjects as the division may specify.
General honors will be granted at the end of every academic year to
all students who during that year have obtained grade A in
enera the majority of the courses taken by them, provided they
have not fallen below grade B in any course in that year.
Highest final general honors will be granted at graduation to all
students who have obtained grade A in the majority of the courses
taken by them during the last three years of college residence, pro-
vided they have not fallen below grade B in any course in those
years.
REGISTER OF STUDENTS
Columbia College
CANDIDATES FOR GRADUATION IN
1 90S
Alexander, Tom Mackenzie New York City
Bagley, George Jardine Rahway, N. J.
Bagnell, Robert Harold New York City
Banks, Harold Purdy New York City
Berliner, Lee Herbert New York City
Bessie, Abraham Wahpeton, N. D.
Bijur, Harry New York City
Billingsley, Paul New York City
Bloom, Irving Mortimer New York City
Bloom, Isidore Toronto, Ontario, Can.
Bonnlander, Vincent Charles New York City
Boorman, Kitchell Monckton New York City
Borchardt, Edwin Montefiore, LL.B., N. Y. Law School, 1905 New York City
Brady, William Gage, Jr New York City
Brainin, Clement S New York City
Brandley, Walter George Newark, N. J.
Bridgman, Linden Wentzel New York City
Brill, Abraham New York City
Bronson, Barnard Sawyer Holly, N. Y.
Bull, George H New York City
Burkhalter, Frank E Waco, Texas
Cassetta, Dominick New York City
Cella, Carlo Domenico Hoboken, N. J.
Chene v, Clarence Orion New York City
Cohn, Michael Martin Buffalo, N. Y.
Comstock, Miles Chester Utica, N. Y.
Conried, Richard Genee New York City
Cowen, Arthur New York City
Crane, Theodore Hubert Yonkers, N. Y.
Cutting, Victor Willard New York City
Davis, Bennett Buffalo, N. Y.
Demarest, Irving Comes Hackensack, N. J.
Donohue, James Henry, Jr New York City
Eastman, William Roslyn, N. Y.
Epstein, Maurice New York City
Fine, George Bruce Arlington, N. J.
Fish, Harry Potter New York City
Fowler, Harold New York City
Gilbert, George Frederick Marshfield, Mo.
Goldblatt, Harold Milton New York City
Goodkind, Morris New York City
Goodman, Edward New York City
Griffin, Ernest Freeland Tarrytown, N. Y.
181
1 82 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
Grossman, Jacob B Weissport, Pa.
Guggenheim, Edmond A New York City
Hagemann, Robert Herman, Jr New York City
Harlam, Elwood Julius New York City
Hauser, John Odell New York City
Herrmann, Alfred New York City
Herts, B. Russell New York City
Hess, Mortimer Henry New York City
Higgins, Fremont Amasa New York City
Hollister Samuel Thomson New York City
Holtzoff, Alexander New York City
Hoyt, Nathaniel Stanislaus New York City
Jacques, George Washington, Jr Elizabeth, N. J.
Kellogg, William Alvin, Jr New York City
Kilmer, Alfred Joyce New Brunswick, N. J.
Kiser, Frederic Garrabrant Brookside, N. J .
Lau, Robert Frederick New York City
Lewis, Leicester Crosby New York City
Lobeck, Albert Ernst Haworth, N. J .
Mabee, Winfred Scribner Paterson, N. J.
MacGreevy, William John New York City
Marshall, Robert Palmer New York City
Miller, Hyman Rudolph New York City
Mockbridge, Ralph Whitney New York City
Montgomery, Austin Philip New York City
Murphy, William Deacon New York City
Murray. Theodore Roosevelt New York City
Nash, Royal Freeman Grand Rapids, Wis.
Negus, John Clement New York City
O'Mahoney, Joseph Christopher New York City
Osterout, William Burgess Freeport, N. Y.
Otis, Arthur Hamilton Tivoli, N. Y .
Palmer, Harold New York City
Perling, Joseph New York City
Perrine, Harold New York City
Poll, Daniel New York City
Porter, Edward Evelyn New York City
Prince, James Frederick Yonkers, N. Y.
Reaney, George Humes New York City
Reed, Latham Ralston New York City
Riegel, Harry New York City
Rindge, Fred Hamilton, Jr New York City
Robie, Marshall Oradell, N. J.
Rom agn a , Anthony Jesse New York City
Rose, Walter Joseph New York City
Rothschild, Marcus A New York City
Rouse, Edward Curtis East Orange, N. J.
Sessa, Thomas Galtan Montclair, N. J.
Shimmon, Aghasie Samuel Gogtapa, Persia
Skutch, Ira New York City
Sloane, John Eyre South Orange, N. J.
Snevily, Henry Mansfield New York City
Stayton, Jacob Winford Yonkers, N. Y.
Swartwout, Frank Robert Scarsdale, N. Y.
Swords, Albert Twombly New York City
Townsend, Edward Benjamin New York City
Van Tine, Addison Allen New York City
REGISTER OF STUDENTS 183
Ware, Foster New York City
Weaver, Paul New York City
Wheeler, John Neville Yonkers, N. Y.
Winchell, Clarence Edward West Orange, N. J.
Windels, Paul William Henrv New York City
Wolferz, Louis Ernst New York City
Wood, James Macdonald, Jr New York City
Wood, William Lawrence Ipswich. Mass.
Woodbury, Walter Bligh Oneida, N. Y.
Wupperman, Carlos Siegert New York City
Zaccara, Antonio New York City
in
1909
Alexander, Arthur Douglas New York City
Alexander, Thomas Kirksville, Mo.
Allerman, Jacob New York City
Amidow, David Eugene Corry, Pa.
Appel, Alexander New York City
Armstrong, Donald New York City
Bach, Richard Frank New York City
Baragwanath, John Gordon New York City
Barber, W. Howard New York City
Bartow, Lathrop New York City
Baum, Albert Louis New York City
Bishop, Frank Warner New York City
Bissell, Pelham St. George, Jr Freeport, N. Y.
Blinn, Oscar Samuel New York City
Brainerd, Harry Beardslee New York City
Breck, William Rogers New York City
Breitenfeld, Emil New York City
Brown, Louis Alexander New York City
Brown, William Hori, Jr New York City
Cane, William Goodman New York City
Carpenter, Rhys New York City
Carroll, Charles Rivers New York City
Chanalis, Michael Nelson New York City
Child, Andrew M., Jr New York City
Cobb , James Livingston New York City
Cohen, Hyman New York City
Cohen, Ira New York City
Cohn-McMaster, Albert Marian New York City
Coleman, McAllister New York City
Compton, George Brokaw Interlaken. N. Y.
Copeland, Ralph New York City
Corbett, Joseph Siebert New York City
Criado, Roger Fernandez New York City
Culman, Carl William New York City
Deacy, William Henry Ossining, N. Y.
Drob, Max Pittsburg, Pa.
Dwyer, Charles Eustace New York City
Epstein, Lewis New York City
Fortinash, Pascal Joseph New York City
Fowler, Robert Ludlow, Jr New York City
Fox, Irving Joseph New York City
Fraser, Leon New York City
1 84 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
Gibson, Leon Wells Newark, N. J.
Golden, Herman New York City
Goldstein, Roy A Dallas, Texas
Goodwin, George Munro New York City
Grant, Edward John New York City
Gray, James Eakins New York City
Griffin, Percy Frank New York City
Gutman, Melvin New York City
Halsey, Raymond Drake Southampton, N. Y.
Hanrahan, John George, Jr New York City
Hanson, George Christopher New York City
Harson, Henry Newman New York City
Heidelberger, Michael New York City
Hershenstein, Charles Jersey City, N. J.
Herts, Harold Henry London, England
Hinck, Claus F., Jr Montclair, N. J.
Hopping, Howard Hitchcock New York City
Jones, Clarence Ray Norway, N. Y.
Kantor, John Leonard New York City
Katz, Edgar Jesse New York City
Kayser, Carl Eberhard New York City
Kelly, Eugene Edmund New York City
Kennedy, Charles Frederick New York City
Kerley, James Hoyt New York City
Kimbel, William Anthony New York City
Kistler, Lloyd Gregory New York City
Koo, Vi Kyuin Wellington Shanghai, China
Kudlich, Bruno Ralph New York City
Latham, Harold Strong Arlington, N. J.
Leary, Daniel, Jr New York City
Lee, Arthur M., Jr Bloomfield, N. J.
Levine, Oscar New York City
Levinthal, Israel Herbert Philadelphia, Pa.
Liebowitz, Sidney New York City
Lippmann, Herbert Marks New York City
Loder, George Edward Port Chester, N. Y.
Loening, Grover Cleveland New York City
Loveman, Michael Heilprin New York City
Luhrs, Immanuel Jersey City, N. J.
McCoun, Frederic Hewlett, Jr New York City
McLaury, Frank South Kortryht, N. Y.
Mackenzie, James Cameron, Jr Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.
Marcus, Charles Lionel New York City
Mead, Frederick Stearns, Jr Arlington, Mass.
Mehler, Leo New York City
Melitzer, Samuel • -New York City
Melville, John Ward Setauket, N. Y.
Milkman, Walter Bernard New York City
Miller, Christopher Blackburn New York City
Morgan, Thomas Charles New York City
Morgan, Wendell Roderick Oneonta, N. Y.
Moss, Arthur Bruce New York City
Nammack, Charles Halpin New York City
Nighman, Clare Edwin Bayonne, N. J.
Norden, Norris Lindsay New York City
Nye, Berthold Hintz Yonkers, N. Y.
Oakley, Thomas Pollock Northport, N. Y.
REGISTER OF STUDENTS 185
Ogden-, Alfred New York City
Pall, Winston Alexander Jersey City, N. J.
Pell, William Henry Dannat New York City
Peyser, Herbert New York City
Price, Hickman Seattle, Wash.
Reichling, Gerard Alston New York City
Rice, Marvin New York City
Rogers, G aillard Sherburne New York City
Rollins, Walter Everett Minneapolis, Minn.
Roome, James Poole New York City
Rothschild, Leopold Opper New York City
Roux, William Charles New York City
Roy, Malcolm Miller Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Sage, Truman Bartlett East Haven, Conn.
Salsbury, Nathan Long Branch, N. J.
Salzano, Francis New York City
San, Louis James Passaic, N. J.
Sanders, Benton New York City
Schaul , Jerome Sandel New York City
Scheffer, Jack Walter New York City
Schermerhorn, Amos Cotting New York City
Schmid, Alfred R New York City
Schultz, Harold Seely Florida, N. Y.
Scovil, Charles Barker New York City
Sellew, Welles Hamilton New York City
Setchanove, Radoslav John Philipoppolis, Bulgaria
Skinner, Herbert Calvin New York City
Smith, Martin De Forest Kingston, N. Y.
Steiner, Joseph Newark, N. J.
Steinmetz, Frederick Charles New York City
Stephenson, Robert New York City
Streeter, Daniel Denison, Jr New York City
Taylor, Harold Williams Beverly, N. J.
Tortora, Albert New York City
Tripp, William Arthur New York City
Turpin, Albert Ernest New York City
Tuthill, Burnet Corwin New York City
Wardell, Winfield Scott, Jr Orange, N. J.
Watson, Morgan Dix New York City
Weeks, Webb W Corry, Pa.
Weinstein, David New York City
Werner, Oscar Victor New York City
141
1910
Adlman, Sidney Paterson, N. J.
Aschner, Paul William New York City
Avery, Walter New York City
Bangs, Francis Nathan New York City
Barnum, Ray Foster White Plains, N. Y.
B aroff , Abraham New York City
Barrett, Guinn H New York City
Barrett, Paul Sydney New York City
Batt, Raymond Michael North Tonawanda, N. Y.
Beard, James Thom., Jr Scranton, Pa.
Belinkoff, Samuel Bayonne, N. J-
Bell, Wiley Alexander, Jr New York City
1 86 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
Berge, Frederick O Kansas City, Mo.
Berinstein, Benjamin Rochester, N. Y.
Blaber, Joseph Thomas New York City
Brenner, Mortimer New York City
Brittain, John Benjamin Yonkers, N. Y.
Brown, Raymond Shiland Jersey City, N. J.
Buckisch, Walter Gerard Martin New York City
Cardozo, Sidney Benjamin New York City
Celler, Emanuel New York City
Chapin, James Paul New York City
Clark, Clarence Milton New York City
Cohen, Joseph Hertz New York City
Cohen, Samuel Meyer New York City
Cohn, Bernard Lamar Memphis, Tenn.
Cooper, Frederick Sturges Mt. Vernon, O.
Corrig, Frank J Lima, Ohio
Corton, William Andrew New York City
Cronyn, George W New York City
Crouze, Albert Pierre New York City
Cutler, Condict Walter, Jr New York City
Danforth, Charles Ryle New York City
Darlington, Henry Vane Bearns Harrisburg, Pa.
Davinos, Harry Harrison, N. J.
Deevey, Edward S Albany, N. Y.
Doremus, Morton Brinckerhoff Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Duncan, McKee Pelham Manor, N. Y.
Eadie, Archibald Robert New York City
Elsasser, Frederick Ralph New York City
Englehart, Jeffrey Heller New York City
Epstein, Albert New York City
Epstein, Bernard New York City
Erskine, Robert Scarborough New York City
Fairbairn, Robert Le Fevre New York City
Ferst, Louis Samuel Harrisburg, Pa.
Finley, Cecil Johnston New York City
Fleischman, Loen S New York City
Force, Jonathan, Jr Livingston, N. J.
Frerichs, Ernest Vivian , New York City
Gannon, Thomas Albert New York City
Garabedia, Mikael Der New York City
de Garmendia, Gonzalo de Cordova New York City
Gibson, Van Rensselaer Yonkers, N. Y.
Giegerich, Arthur N New York City
Giegerich, Leonard Anthony New York City
Gluck, Harry J New York City
Goldberg, George New York City
Goodman, Sydney Lion New York City
Gulliver, Harold George Portland, Me.
Gunther, Arthur New York City
Haines, Franklin Mifflin New York City
Hart, N eville Bradford New York City
Healy, Thomas Francis New York City
Heard, Walter Scott New Orleans, La.
Henderson, Harold Gould, Jr New York City
Hill, Dudleigh New York City
Hinman, Edward, Jr New York City
Hochberger, Oscar New York City
REGISTER OF STUDENTS 187
Holzworth, John Michbll Cleveland, Ohio
Hunt, Charles Warrbn. Jr New York City
Huttlingbr, Carl Fritz New York City
Joerg, Alfred Norton New York City
Jones, John Dotha New York City
Keating, William Edwin Dallas, Texas
Kxbndl, Theodore, Jr New York City
Kirby, Russell Thorp New York City
Klein, Leonard New York City
Klein, Leopold New York City
Klepetko, Ernest New York City
Kohler, F. Dudley New York City
Kraft, Philip Henry, Jr New York City
Kroeger, Herbert Benjamin New York City
Kronman. David Edward New York City
Langer, William Casselton, N. D.
Lapolla, Garibaldi Mario New York City
Levison, Lucian Harry New York City
Liebman, Lester Myron New York City
Lloyd, Llewellyn New York City
Louria, Alexander Leon New York City
MacColl, Robert John New York City
McDermott, Arthur Vincent New York City
McKenney, William James New York City
Mahon, Robert V New York City
Marilley, Edward Patrick Croghan, N. Y.
Mellen, Henry L Middlebury, Vt.
Meyer, Adolph Henry New York City
Moitrier, William, Jr New York City
Molter, Harold New York City
Morris, Alexander Becht New York City
Moses, Alfred Staunton New York City
Moses, Eugene Frederic New York City
Mullen, James Henry Rensselaer, N. Y.
Murray, Harrison Freeling Narrowsburg, N. Y.
Murray', John Alexander, Jr New York City
Nauheim, Melville New York City
Neuman, Abraham New York City
Noble, Ransom New York City
O'Brien, John New York City
Osborne, Earl William New York City
Osterhout, Edgar Howard Freeport, N. Y.
Paddock, Lincoln New York City
Paddock, Royce New York City
Pearson, William DeForest Waterloo, N. Y.
Pfeiffer, Edward Heyman New York City
Ramsdell, Charles Homer New York City
Rapp, Paul Louis New York City
Reed, Luther Anderson New York City
Remsen, William New York City
Renton, Stanley Harned New York City
Renwick, Henry- Brevoort New York City
Rimpo, Edward William Irvington, N. J.
Rinck, Walter Newark, N. J.
Robinson, Louis Harry Curwensville, Pa.
Rockwood, Nathaniel Otis Montclair, N. J.
Roeder, Ralph Leclercq New York City
1 88 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
Rosenthal, George Jacob New York City
Scheib, Richard New York City
Schlossm an, William Mayer New York City
Schmelzel, Clarence New York City
Schrenkeisen, Frank Gillman Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Schur, Robert Paul New York City
Scott, George W. A New York City
Selvage, Notman Newark, N. J.
Sexton, Andrew J. Graham Orange, N. J.
Seymour, Raymond Branch New York City
Shaw, James Maddock Orange, N. J.
Shoenfeld, Herbert Frank New York City
Sloan, Harold Stevenson New York City
Smith, Edward Philip Buffalo, N. Y.
Smith, Geddes Orange, N. J.
Solis, Marshall Erasmus Managua, Nicaragua
Stableford, Richard Gordon, Jr New York City
Stephenson, Raymond Williams New York City
Sternberg, Edward New York City
Sterrett, James Everett Ossining, N. Y.
Stickles, Lloyd Newark, N. J.
Story, Harold V New York City
Sullivan, Vincent Ferrer New York City
Swanton, Richard L New York City
Tannenbaum, Samuel William New York City
Taylor, Samuel Guyon New York City
Thornton, Thomas Francis New York City
Todd, Harold Cammeyer Fanwood, N. J.
True, Roland Schiller New York City
Van Kleeck, Euen New York City
Wachner, Edwin Miles Akron, O.
Warren, George Henry, Jr New York City
Washington, Henry James Lamar New York City
Werner, Paul Charles Long Branch, N. J.
Whipps, William Osterhout Kalispell, Mont.
Wildman, Henry Valentine, Jr New York City
Wile, Walter David New York City
Willis, Benjamin New York City
de Wilton, Rollo L Hornell, N. Y.
Wolb arst, Eli Saul New York City
Yokel, Arthur New York City
167
1911
Altenberg, Edgar New York City
Amdursky, Abraham Maurice New York City
Axman, Laurence Henry New York City
Baker, Henry D New York City
Belknap, Ward Brodhead New York City
Bender, Sidney New York City
Berenberg, David Paul New York City
Berkowitz, Henry New York City
Bieber, Paul David New York City
Bishop, Shelton Hale New York City
Blumberg, Isidor Bernard New York City
Boas, Ernst Philip Grantwood.N. J.
Bowers, Frederic Thomas New York City
REGISTER OF STUDENTS 189
Bowman, Kenneth Harkness Montclair, N. J.
Bramwkll, George Moffat New York City
Brandt, Robert Carl New York City
Brownell, Max Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
Bruno, Alexander New York City
Cardoza, Danforth New York City
Caruso, Carmine William Newark, N. J.
Castell, George Oliver New York City
Childs, Sterry Hunt New York City
Claiborne, Robert New York City
Colton, John Hurstmanceaux Yokohama, Japan
Colton, Raymond New Rochelle, N. Y.
Covello, Leonard New York City
Davidow, Leonard H New York City
De Pew, Pierre H Nyack, N. Y.
Dorr, William Caspar New York City
Downs, Irvin Reed New York City
Dwyer, Geoffrey James New York City
Eddison, William Barton Irvington, N. Y.
Egan, Robert Seton New York City
Egbert, George Pennington New York City
Eichmann, Meyer West Hoboken, N. J.
Eimer, Carl Bernard New York City
Ernst, Montrose New York City
Felbel, Frank Julius New York City
Ferrara, Joseph Red Bank, N. J.
Ferreira, Avelino Vincent Hackensack, N. J.
Fishel, David Einhorn New York City
Frank, Max New York City
Frankfort, Nathan Herman New York City
Friedman, Israel New York City
Fries, Julius Frederick New York City
Galvin, William Austin New York City
Gans, Leonard S New York City
Gatch, Nelson Burnes St. Louis, Mo.
Gerstein, Samuel New York City
Ginsberg, Ismar New York City
Goldsmith, Irving Edward New York City
Goldstein, Herbert Samuel New York City
Gould, Jay New York City
Grassi, Waldemar Howard New York City
Grossbaum, Louis New York City
Haber, Isador West Hoboken, N. J.
Hamburger, Perry Julius New York City
Handelsman, Samuel New York City
Harris, David Benjamin New York City
Hartung, Ernest William New York City
Hastings, William Henry, Jr New York City
Hedges, James Sylvester New York City
Heydecker, Wayne Darlington Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Hill, John Warren New York City
Hillman, John A New York City
Holbrook, Newberry New York City
Howell, Jesse Vernon Devine, Texas
Hudson, Charles Alan Westbury, N. Y.
Hyman, Joseph New York City
Jenkins, Reginald C New York City
IOO COLUMBIA COLLEGE
Kayser, Robert Barr Boston, Mass.
Ketchum, Roland S New York City
Klugescheid, Richard Charles New York City
Roenig, Leo New York City
Korn, Samuel Seymour New York City
Krinsky, Max Louis New York City
Kuhn, Samuel Oppenheim New York City
Kimstler, Monroe B New York City
Lasher, Duncan MacMillan Yonkers, N. Y.
Lattin, Clark Parker Yonkers, N. Y.
Liebler, Harold Baxter Riverside, Conn.
Lobeck, Armin Kohl Haworth, N. J.
Lowe, William Adams Hempstead, N. Y.
Luhman, Chester New Rochelle, N. Y.
Mackenzie, Edward Hemond GlenSpey, N. Y.
Mackintosh, James Handforth Hoboken, N. J.
M acRossie, William New York City
Maguire, Cedric Ferris New York City
Marcus, Bernard New York City
Mayers, Lawrence Seymour New York City
Michtom, Joseph Stewart New York City
Muller, Hermann Joseph New York C'ty
Murray, Edward Warms New York City
Newhouse, Edgar L., Jr West Orange, N. J.
Offner, Richard New York City
Paulsen, George William New York City
Phillips, Elmer Hendricks New York City
Picard, Maurice Nyack, N. Y.
Pitt, Steddiford New Rochelle, N. Y.
Propp, Nathan Abraham Tupper Lake, N. Y.
Rade, Henry S New York City
Reidy, John Foley New York City
Renshaw, Alfred Noroton, Conn.
Riegel, Guy Hughes Lebanon, Pa.
Roche, Ernest Spencer New York City
Ross, William Neeley Troy, N. Y.
Rothwell, Austin Sherwood New York City
Rowley, Charles Donovan New York City
Rudensey, Abram ' Montclair, N. J.
Rufle, Frederick Charles New York City
Runge, Otto Ernest Frederick New York City
Ryan, Hubert William Ossining, N. Y.
Schlesinger, Gabriel New York City
Schmidt, Arnold M New York City
Schultz, Louis Claude Florida, N. Y .
Sessler, Marcel Klemert New York City
Shirley, Amos Reginald New York City
Slutsky, Henry New York City
Spencer, Frederick Burr New York City
Stephens, Stephen Dover, Jr New York City
Stewart, Ralph Randles New York City
Sticker, Henry New York City
Stone, Edwin Wadsworth New York City
Strassburger, Samuel Myer Long Branch, N. J.
Timmons, Judson Colorado Springs, Col.
Tooker, Harold Clifton New York City
Ungar, George Fisher New York City
REGISTER OF STUDENTS 19 1
Van Tink, Harold New York City
Welch, Eugene Nilbs New York City
Wheklkk, Irwin New York City
Whitlock, Bache McE New York City
Zibgler, Winprbd Hamlin Detroit, Mich.
[13a]
NON-MATRICULATED STUDENTS
Best, W. Newton Los Angeles, Cal.
Bbvine, William Bryan, P.F New York City
Brock, Raymond Elliott St. Louis, Mo-
Byrne, John, Francis New York City
Carmichael, Cyril New York City
Conger, Ashley D New York City
Dixon, Jordan New York City
Corwin, Hilary Earl Huntington, N. Y.
Davidson, William B Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.
Downie, James Vale Beaver'Falls, Pa.
Driggs, Spencer Bartholomew New York City
Ebstone, Henry Adolph New York City
Foster, Wesley William Millington, N. J.
Fox, Oscar Alexander Fort Wayne, Ind.
Gross, Benjamin Jersey City, N. J.
Hahn, Rudolf Cornwall, N. Y.
Halamka, LeRoy M New York City
Harris, Richard Donnell New York City
Hauser, George D New York City
Hershenstein, Samuel Newark, N. J.
Hollenbeck, James Sullivan Watertown, N. Y.
Joyce, Walter Leroy Ashland, Wis.
Kinney, Warren New York City
Leonard, William Meeker New York City
Lesser, Myron Lawrence New York City
Lipman, Bert South Orange, N. J.
Low, Jospeh Franklin New York City
McCoy, Peter Joseph, Jr New York City
Maul, William F New York City
Miller, Ritchie Constant Peekskill, N. Y.
Nieto, Luis E New York City
Nordell, Eskel Stamford, Conn.
Noyes, Julius Wentworth New York City
Odell, Benjamin Bryant Newburgh, N. Y.
O'Donnell, Herbert Hackettstown, N. J.
Paine, William Edmond, Jr New York City
Pell, Herbert Claiborne, Jr Tuxedo, N. Y.
Pullis, Lawrance Asten Bay Shore, N. Y.
Reid, Cornell New York City
Rethy, Joseph Bernard New York City
Riblet, Edward Briggs New York City
Rogers, Clarence Thompson New York City
Schlichten, George William, Jr New York City
Selden, Henry Bill Greenwich, Conn.
Shields, James New York City
Shuto, Satoshi New York City
Skinner, Alanson New York City
Squier, Charles B New York City
Stephens, Richmond New York City
192 COLUMBIA COLLEGE
Strasburger, Alfred New York City
Swanstrom, Arthur Mundy New York City
Thomas, Paul Bernard New York City
Tobochnick, Michael New York City
Walsh, James Hubert Boston, Mass.
Webber, William Thomas New York City
Wood, Alfred Elmer New York City
56
The following matriculated students in the College, attended the Summer Session of
1907, but did not register for the first term of the Academic year 1907-8 :
Collins, Kenneth B. Miller, Robert M.
Egan, Joseph Leo Mills, Walter Sands
Eiseman, Benjamin Ripenbein, Nicholas
McLean, Henry Charles Sanger, Arthur C.
Shack, Samuel M.
SUMMARY.
Candidates for Degrees —
In 1908 in
In 1909 141
In 1910 167
In 1911 133
Non-Matriculated Students 56
Total 607
SCHOOL OF LAW-
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION AND GOVERNMENT
Officers of the Faculty
George W. Kirchwey, A.B.,
Dean and ex-officio Member of the University Council
Henry S. A. M. Redfield, LL.D Secretary
Francis M. Burdick, LL.D.,
(Term expires in ioio). Elected Delegate to the University
Council
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D. (Cantab.), Litt.D. (Oxon.)
President
John W. Burgess, Ph.D., LL.D.,
Ruggles Professor of Political Science and Constitutional Law
Munroe Smith, J.U.D., LL.D.,
Professor of Roman Law and Comparative Jurisprudence
'Frank J. Goodnow, LL.D.,
Eaton Professor of Administrative Law and Municipal Science
Francis M. Burdick, LL.D Dwight Professor of Laws
George W. Kirchwey, A.B Kent Professor of Law
John B. Moore, LL.D.,
Hamilton Fish Professor of International Law and Diplomacy
George F. Canfield, A.B., LL.B Professor of Law
Henry S. Redfield, A.M., LL.D Nash Professor of Law
Charles Thaddeus Terry, A.B., LL.B Professor of Law
Nathan Abbott, A.B., LL.B Professor of Law
Harry Alonzo Cushing, Ph.D., LL.B Professor of Law
K.G. Rudolf Leonhard, J. U.D... Kaiser Wilhelm Professor for 1907-08
John C. Gray, LL.D. . : Carpentier Lecturer for 190J-08
Goldthwaite H. Dorr, A.B., LL.B Lecturer
PURPOSES IOF THE SCHOOL
The design of the School of Law is to afford a thorough, practical
and scientific education in the principles of:
The common and statute law of the United States.
The English and American system of equity jurisdiction,
"Absent on leave.
193
194 SCHOOL OF LAW
The public law of the United States and Europe.
The Roman law — ancient and modern.
Theoretical and comparative jurisprudence.
PROGRAM OF STUDIES
First Year
Contracts — Keener's Cases on Contracts. 4 hours. Professor
Terry
Criminal Law — Beale's Cases on Criminal Law. 3 hours, first
half-year. Professor Cushing
Elements of Law — 3 hours, first half-year. Professor Munroe
Smith
Equity — Ames's Cases on Equity, vol. 1. 3 hours, second half-year.
Professor Abbott
Pleading and Practice — Ames's Cases on Common Law Pleading ;
Perry on Common Law Pleading. 3 hours, second half-year. Pro-
fessor Redfield
Real and Personal Property — Kirchwey's Readings in Real
Property; Gray's Cases on Property, vol. 1 (2d ed.). 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Kirchwey
Torts — Burdick's Cases on Torts (3d ed.); Burdick on Torts. 2
hours. Professor Burdick
Second Year
Admiralty — Ames's Cases on Admiralty. 2 hours, first half-
year. Mr. Dorr
Agency — Wambaugh's Cases on Agency. 3 hours, first half-year.
Professor Cushing
Bailments and Carriers — Beale and Wyman's Cases on Public
Service Companies. 3 hours, second half-year. Mr. Dorr
Bankruptcy and Insolvency — -Williston's Cases on Bankruptcy.
2 hours, first half-year. Professor Cushing
♦Damages — Beale's Cases on Damages. 2 hours, first half-year.
♦Domestic Relations — Smith's Cases on Persons. 2 hours, second
half-year.
Equity — Ames's Cases on Trusts. 2 hours. Professor Abbott
♦Insurance — Richards on Insurance. 2 hours, first half-year.
Negotiable Paper — Ames's Cases on Bills and Notes. 2 hours.
Professor Burdick
Pleading and Practice — Redfield's Cases on Code Pleading and
Practice; Thompson's Cases on Equity Pleading; New York Code
of Civil Procedure. 2 hours. Professor Redfield
* Omitted in 1907-08.
PROGRAM OF STUDIES 195
Quasi-Contracts — Scott's Cases on Quasi-Contracts. 3 hours,
second half-year. Professor Cushing
Real and Personal Property — Gray's Cases on Property, vols.
2 (2d ed.) and 3 (2d ed.). 2 hours. Professor Kirchwey
Sales of Personal Property — Burdick's Cases on Sales (2d ed.) ;
Burdick on Sales (2d ed.). 2 hours. Professor Burdick
Law of Officers. Goodnow's Cases on the Law of Officers. 2
hours, second half-year. Professor Goodnow
Comparative Constitutional Law. 2 hours. Professor Burgess
Institutes of Justinian: (a) Compared with American and Ger-
man Private Law. 2 hours, first half-year. Professor Leonhard :
(b) Select titles. 2 hours, second half-year. Professor Munroe
Smith.
Third Year
Corporations — Keener's Cases on Corporations. 2 hours. Pro-
fessor Canfield
Equity : Trusts — Ames's Cases on Trusts. 2 hours. Professor
Abbott
Evidence — Thayer's Cases on Evidence. 2 hours. Professor
Kirchwey
Mortgages — Kirchwey's Cases on Mortgages. 3 hours, second half-
year. Professor Cushing
Partnership — Burdick's Cases on Partnership; Burdick on Partner-
ship. 2 hours. Professor Burdick
Pleading and Practice. — New York Code of Civil Procedure.
3 hours, first half-year. Professor Redfield
Real and Personal Property — Gray's Cases on Property, vols.
5 and 6. 2 hours. Professor Abbott
♦Suretyship — Ames's Cases on Suretyship. 2 hours, first half-
year.
Trusts and Perpetuities — Under the Revised Statutes of New
York. 2 hours, second half-year. Professor Canfield
Wills and Administration — Gray's Cases on Property, vol. 4
(2d ed.). 3 hours, second half-year. Professor Redfield
American Constitutional Law: Private Rights under the Con-
stitution. 2 hours. Professor Burgess
Conflict of Laws — Beale's Cases on the Conflict of Laws. 1 hour.
Professor John Bassett Moore
The Corpus Juris Civilis and Modern Law. 2 hours, first half-
year. Professor Leonhard.
♦Omitted in 1907-08.
196 SCHOOL OF LAW
History of European Law. 2 hours, second half-year. Professor
Munroe Smith
International Law — Scott's Cases on International Law. 2 hours.
Professor John Bassett Moore
Municipal Corporations — Abbot's Cases on Public Corporations ;
Smith's Cases on Municipal Corporations. 2 hours, first half-year.
Professor Goodnow
Modern Civil Law. 2 hours. Professor Munroe Smith
Law of Taxation. Goodnow's Cases on Taxation. 2 hours,
second half-year. Professor Goodnow «
Social Tendencies of German Law. i hour, first half-year.
Professor Leoxhard.
Nature and Sources of the Law. 3 hours for four weeks in
April. Professor Gray.
Practice Courts
Moot Courts, conducted with special reference to the courses in plead-
ing and practice, will constitute a regular feature of the work of the
second and third years. They will be under the supervision of Pro-
fessor Redfield.
Requirements for Admission
To the First-Year Class
All applicants for admission must present satisfactory evidence of
good moral character, and must be at least eighteen years of age for
the first-year class and correspondingly older for advanced standing.
Graduates of colleges and scientific schools in good standing are
admitted without examination. Except as provided on p. 177, all
persons other than such graduates must present satisfactory evidence
of preliminary training equivalent to that of a full college course.
To Advanced Standing
Students complying with the above requirements for admission to
the School, who have, in addition, successfully pursued the study of
law for at least a year in an approved law school, may, on examination
giving satisfactory evidence of proficiency in the studies of the first
year, be admitted to advanced standing as members of the second-
year class.
No one will be admitted to advanced standing beyond the second
year except by special vote of the Faculty.
The examinations for advanced standing cover all the work previ-
ously done by the class to which admission is sought, and are held at
the end of the academic year and during the week preceding the
'Absent on leave.
REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION 197
opening of the fall term. No certificate or diploma of work done else-
where will be accepted in lieu of these examinations.
As Non-Matriculated Students
In exceptional cases qualified persons not candidates for the degree
of LL.B., who are not eligible under this rule, may be admitted as non-
matriculated students by vote of the Faculty. No one will be ad-
mitted to the School to pursue advanced work as a non-matriculated
student who has not passed satisfactory examinations in the contract,
equity, and property courses preceding such work in point of time.
The Curriculum
The curriculum leading to the degree of Bachelor of Laws covers a
period of three years. The work of the first year is prescribed. All
the courses of the second and third years are elective. Courses not
taken in the second year may be elected as a part of the work of the
following year, but third-year courses will not in general be open to
second-year students. A few courses are given only in alternate years.
These may be taken both by second- and third-year students.
Registration is limited to courses taken for a degree, and students
will be held responsible for the satisfactory completion of all courses
for which they are registered.
The work selected by a law student is subject in every case to the
approval of the Dean.
Examinations
Written examinations are held at the end of each academic year on
the subjects of that year.
All students, whether matriculated or non-matriculated, must, un-
less excused by the Dean, present themselves for examination in all
the subjects for which they are registered at the first examination
held therein, and, in case of excuse from any examination, must take
the next examination offered in such subject. Students are not per-
mitted to take examinations in courses for which they are not regularly
registered.
At all stated examinations the standing of students will be indicated
by the letters A, B, C, D, and F, representing Excellent, Good, Fair,
Poor, and Failure, respectively. These grades will be part of the
record of the students in the office of the Registrar and will be reported
to them as soon as possible after each examination.
No student is admitted to the second-year class who is deficient in
more than four hours of the work of the first year. No student will be
admitted to the third-year class who is deficient in any subject of the
first year or in more than one full course or in more than two half-year
courses of the second vear.
198 SCHOOL OF LAW
No student failing in any subject will be permitted to take a second
examination therein without having again taken the course in which
such failure occurred, nor will any student failing a second time in any
subject be allowed to continue in the School except by special vote of
the Faculty.
Non-matriculated students must pass satisfactory examinations in
not less than 75 per cent, of the work for which they are registered, as a
condition of continuing in the School.
No other examinations are given.
Degree of Bachelor of Laws
The required work for the degree of Bachelor of Laws consists of 84
points, each point representing the satisfactory completion of work
requiring attendance one hour a week for one half-year.
No student may take less than twenty nor more than thirty points
in any year without the consent of the Dean.
Not more than one full course nor more than two half-year courses in
which the student receives a mark of D may be counted toward a
degree in any one year.
No student failing in any subject on the final examination of his
class will be admitted to the degree unless within two years of such
failure he presents himself for re-examination and receives a mark
of C, at least, therein.
Non-matriculated students who have been members of the School
for at least two years may become eligible for the degree if they shall
have attained an average of B in all the work prescribed therefor.
Scholarships and Prizes
(See page 404)
Fees
(See page 27)
Law Library
The law library has been greatly extended and improved, and now
consists of upwards of 30,000 volumes, which have been carefully
selected to meet the wants of students. It is especially rich in Amer-
ican, English, and British Colonial reports.
The general Library of the University (see page 35) contains ex-
tensive collections of works relating to international, public, and
Roman law.
REGISTER OF STUDENTS
School of Law
THIRD YEAR— CLASS OF 1908
Abbey, Edward Norman, A.B. Hamilton 1905 Smithtov.-n Branch, N. Y.
Aston, Albert, A.B. Yale 1905 New York City
Baum, Philip, A.B. 1906 New York City
Bedinger, Henry Garrett, A.B. Univ. Missouri 1905 Anchorage, Ky.
Bernstein, Morris Henry, A.B. Univ. Georgia 1905 Savannah, Ga.
Bertini, Amedeo August, A.B. 1906 New York City
Bondy, Eugene Lyons, A.B. 1906 New York City
Boyle, John Neville, A.B. 1906 New York City
Buffett, Benjamin R., A.B. Mt. Allison Univ. 1899. . . .Grand Bank, Newfoundland
Bulkley, Charles Stone, A.B. Yale 1905 Summit, N. J.
Burdett, Lester Charles, A.B. Manhattan 1905 Fort Lee, N. J.
Burdick, Charles Kellogg, A.B. Princeton 1904 New York City
Chambers, Frank William, A.B. 1906 New York City
Clare, James Leo, A.B. St. Francis Xavier 1505 New York City
Clark, Thomas Fayette New York City
Clinkscales, Louis Dupree, A.B. Baylor 1905 Vinita, Okla.
Cohen, Isidore, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Ellis, George Adams, A.B. 1904 Castleton, Vt.
Farwell, Earle, U. S. N. A. 1905 Philadelphia, Pa.
Fetzer, John Elgin, A.B. Univ. Michigan, 1906 Denver, Colo.
Floyd, Charles Harold, B.S. Harvard 1903 Hyde Park, Mass.
Frank, Arthur, B.S. Vanderbilt 1905 Nashville, Tenn.
Gallatin, Goelet, A.B. 1900 New York City
Geer, William Montague, Jr., A.B. 1906 New York City
Gooldy, Walter G., A.B. Univ. Denver 1903 Dixon, Wyom,
Gwinn, Ralph, A.B. DePauw 1906 Noblesville, Ind.
Hogan, James Joseph, A.B. Yale 1905 Torrington, Conn.
Howell, Rapelje, A.B. Cambridge, England 1902 New York City
Hyman, Maurice, A.B. 1905 New York City
Isaacs, Samuel Stanley, A.B. 1906 New York City
Kendler, Julius, A.B. 1906 New York City
King, Clarence B., A.B. Univ. Wisconsin 1906 Madison, Wis.
Laing, John Albert, A.B. Dartmouth 1905 Albany, N. Y.
Leavenworth, Ellis Willard, A.B. Colgate 1905 Eaton, N. Y.
LeRoy, Robert, A.B. 1905 New York City
McCarthy, Theodore, A.B. 1906 New York City
McKennis, Herbert, A.B. Dartmouth 1904 Albany, N. Y.
McMorrow, Thomas John, A.B. Manhattan 1905 New York City
Maves, Albert Edward, A.B. 1906 New York City
Mela, Harry Ferdinand, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Milbank, Harold, A.B. Yale 1905 New York City
Nave, Mark Deming, A.B. 1901, A.M. Wabash 1904 Mt. Sterling, Ky.
Openhym, Wilfred Adolphe, A.B. Harvard 1905, A.M. 1906 New York City
Palmer, Walter Matthew, A.B. Hamilton 1905 Little Falls, N. Y.
199
200 SCHOOL OF LAW
Peter, William Frederick, Jr., A.B. Yale 1905 Seymour, Ind.
Porter, William Redfield, A.B. 1906, A.M. 1907 New York City
Powell, Frederick James, E.M. 1905 New York City
Rogers, Ralph Ernest, A.B. Yale 1901 New York City
Roy, Edward Cosby, A.B. Univ.Louisville 1903, B.S. Central Univ. 1905 Louisville, Ky.
Runyon, Charles, A.B. Williams 1905 Yonkers, N. Y.
Selig, Samson, A.B. 1906 Atlanta, Ga.
Shapiro, Louis M., B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Shientag, Barnard Floyd, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Siegel, Alexander Bernard, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Study, George Winslow, A.B. Univ. Indiana 1905 Winchester, Ind.
Weil, Jesse, A.B. 1905 New York City
Wheeler, Mason, A.B. Univ. Nebraska 1906 Lincoln, Neb.
Whitaker, Frederick Prescott, A.B. Leland Stanford Jr. 1905 Grantwood, N. J.
Williams, Charles Laidlaw, A.B. 1906 East Orange, N. J.
Third Year — Class of 1908 59
SECOND YEAR— CLASS OF 1909
Anderson, Roger Hamlin, A.B. Robert 1904, A.B.Yale, 1906. .Constantinople. Turkey
Arms, Guy Turner, A.B. Yale 1906 New London. Conn.
Bailly, Edward Cashman, A.B. 1906 Spencerport, N. Y.
Bangs, Henry McComb, A.B. 1906 New York City
Bangser, Adolph, A.B. 1907 Lebanon, Pa.
Barber, James Fred, A.B. Cedarville College 1904 Cedarville, O.
Bevier, Louis, 3rd, A.B. Rutgers 1906 New Brunswick, N. J.
Blechman, Joseph Pierpont, A.B. 1906 New York City
Buchner, Charles John, A.B. St. John's 1906 New York City
Cohn, Abye Albert, A.B. 1906, Ph.B. Univ. Miss. 1905 Brookhaven, Miss.
Colton, Henry Elliott, A.B. Yale 1902 New York City
Corlett, William Wellington New York City
Cross, Bolling Allyn, A.B. Louisiana State Univ. 1906 Baton Rouge, La.
Doernberg, Walter S., A.B. 1907 New York City
Dow, Fayette Brown, A.B. Amherst 1904 Rochester, N. Y.
Dox, Ralph Watson, A.B. 1906 Lockport. N. Y.
Drain, Dale David, A.B. Univ. of Nebraska, 1907 Kirkwood, 111.
Eastman, Henry Western, A.B. 1907 Roslyn, N. Y.
Ellenwood, Ernest Judson, Ph.B. Union 1905 Dannemora, N. Y.
Ellis, Floyd Elmo Carlisle, Ind.
Folger, Paul, A.B. Cornell 1906 Geneva, N. Y.
Frink, Ralph Mendenhall, A.M. 1906, A.B. Wabash 1905 Elkhart, Ind.
Goetz, Norman S., A.B. 1906 New York City
Gordon, Percy Adolphus, A.B. 1907 Weehawken, N. J.
Hamilton, Sinclair, A.B. Princeton 1906 Englewood, N. J.
Hay, William Woodhull, A.B. Princeton 1906 New York City
Heinick, Fred Robert Berlin, Germany
(equiv. A.B.,) Kaiser Wilhelm's Akademie, Berlin, Ger. 1902
Hershkoff, Bernard, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Houston, Alfred, A.B. St. John's 1906 Valparaiso, Chile
Jackson, Liston, A.B. Wake Forest 1906 Dillon, S. C.
Jollon, Alfred John, A.B. St. John's 1905 New York City
Jones, George, A.B. Harvard, 1905 New York City
Judson, Leonard, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Kells, Lucas Carlisle, A.M. Univ. of Minn. 1904 Sauk Centre, Minn.
Kentwell, Lawrence Klindt Honolulu, H. I.
Latham, Dudley E., Ph.B. Lafayette 1905 Weatherly, Pa.
Lord, Franklin B., Jr., A.B. Yale 1905 New York City
SECOND YEAR CLASS 201
McLaughlin, James B., A.B. Fordham 1903 New York City
Marsden. Walter E., A.B. Yale 1905 Johnstown, Pa.
Maurice, Albert Touzalin, A.B. Princeton 1906 Athens, Pa.
Miller, Sanford Lawrence Linlithgo, N, \ .
Murphy, Charles Aloysius, A.B. Univ. Pennsylvania 1905 Philadelphia, Fa.
O'Connor. Vincent Aloysius, A.B. St. John's 1906 New York City
Pierce, Marion Barnwell, A.B. Wofford 1906 Sparta, Ga.
Read, Harlan, B.L. Ohio Wesleyan 1906 Delaware, Ohio
Richter, Stanley Lasker, A.B. 1906 New York City
Riddle, Stanley Clifton, B.S. Ohio Wesleyan 1906 Delaware, Ohio
Rinke, Arthur Werner, A.B. Yale 1906 New York City
Roig, Harold Joseph, A.B. Cornell, 1907 Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Rosenblatt, Bernard Abraham, A.B. 1907 New York City
Ryba, John, (equiv. A.B.,) Univ. Cracovia 1877 Poland, Austria
Sage, George Nelson, B.S. Univ. Rochester 1905 Clifton Springs, N. Y.
Schaffer, Franklin Pierce, A.B. Oberlin 1906 New York City
Schwarz, Walter M., A.B. 1907 New York City
Scribner, Charles Edwin, B.S. Princeton 1905 Boonton, N. J.
Shafer, George Carlton, A.B. Princeton 1903 Montrose, Pa.
Shapinsky, Alyin Theodore, A.B. 1907 Louisville, Ky.
Sheehan, Paul, A.B. Yale 1906 Buffalo, N. Y.
Shelton, William B., A.B. Yale 1906 Norwalk, Conn.
Sicher, Dudley Frank, A.B. Yale 1904, A.M. 1905 New York City
Simpson, Ely, A.B. C. C. N .Y. 1906 New York City
Skinner, Robert Wilkinson, Jr., A.B. Harvard 1906 New York City
Snead, Charles Golden, Jr., A.B. Lincoln 1906 Waterbury, Conn.
Spence, Kenneth Monroe, A.B. 1906 New York City
Spiegel, Alfonse Frank (equiv. A.B.) , Hanover, North Germany, 1906. .New York City
Spitz, Edward Frederick, A.B. 1906. A.M. 1907 New York City
Sprague, William Buell, A.B. Yale 1906 New York City
Stanley, Edward Otis, Jr., A.B. Princeton 1906 East Orange, N. J.
Sturtevant, Watkin Powell, A.B. Allegheny 1906 Conneautville, Pa.
Swain, Prescott Leggett, A.B. Harvard 1905 New York City
Tachna, Max, A.B. 1907 New York City
Travis, Charles Mabbett, A.B. Wesleyan 1906 New York City
Trosk, Charles, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Vincent, Harold Gaston, A.B. Oberlin 1906 Oberlin, Ohio
Welles, Frank Corday, A.B. 1907 New York City
Wicke, Carl, A.B. 1907 New York City
Williams, Eric Johann, A.B. Harvard 1906 Lockport, N. Y.
Wise, Boyd Douglas, A.B. 1907 New York City
Wolff, Louis Jacob, A.B. 1907 New York City
Wormser, Isaac Maurice, A.B. 1906 New York City
Zion, Edwin H., A.B. Park^College, 1906 Stanton, Neb.
Second Year — Class of 1909 83
FIRST YEAR— CLASS OF 19 10
Asher, Jacob, A.B. Clark 1907 Worcester, Mass.
Alsop, Reese Denny, Ph. B. Yale 1904 New York City
Ault, Harley Addison, A.B. Baker Univ. 1906 Ottawa, Kans.
Baldo, Benjamin, Ph.B. National College 1900 Caracas, Venezuela, S.A.
Baldwin, Lorenzo Wilson, A.B. Bowdoin 1907 Newburyport, Mass.
Baumer, Herbert P New York City
Behr, Karl Howell, Ph.B. Yale 1906 New York City
Bissell, Louis P., A.B. 19C4, A.M. 1905, Princeton Philadelphia, Pa.
Black, Loring Wilton, A.B. Fordham 1907 New York City
Campbell, Lonnie Lee, A.B. Univ. of Arkansas 1906 Newport, Ark.
202 SCHOOL OF LAW
Chapin, Henry Eagle, A.B. 1907 New York City
Cherry, Wilbur Harkness, A.B. McGill Univ. 1907 Toledo, Ohio
Chmielinski, Harry, A.B. Holy Cross 1904 Warsaw, Poland
Church, Elihu Cunningham, C.E. 1904 New York City
Cooder, Clement Moffat, Litt.B. Princeton 1907 Rahway, N. J.
Coplon, Nathan, B.S. Univ. of Georgia 1907 Cedartown, Ga.
Crandall, John Willoughby, A.B. Whitworth 1907 Tacoma, Wash.
Dorsey, Erastus Roy Atlanta, Ga.
Dye, Trafton Mickelwait, A.B. Oberlin 1906 Oregon City, Ore.
Early, Ernest Rhea, A.B. Emory and Henry 1908 Foster Falls, Va.
Ferrari, Robert Anthony, A.B. 1905 M.A. 1907 New York City
Fleischmann, Albert Joseph, A.B. Johns Hopkins 1907 Baltimore, Md.
French, Clayton T. A., A.B. N. Y. U. 1907 New York City
Gabriel, Bertram A., A.B. Yale 1907 New York City
Garvey, Richard, Jr., B.S. St. Vincent 1906 Los Angeles, Cal-
Geer, Olin Potter, A.B. Williams 1907 New York City
Hall, Emmett Connor, A.B. Univ. of Nashville 1906 Nashville, Tenn.
Hare, Russell I., A.B. Ohio State Univ. 1905 Muskogee, Okla.
Hart, Edward Henry, A.B. Yale 1907 New York City
Heidgard, Herman William, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1907 New York City
Herman, Moses Milton, A.B. Washington and Lee 1906 Danville, Va.
Hirsch, Gilbert Julius, A.B. Harvard 1907 New York City
Hopping, Allen Tilton, A.B. 1907 New York C ity
House, Joseph Warren, A.B. Univ. of Arkansas 1907 Little Rock, Ark.
Hulsmann, Hermann Albert Hilversum, Holland
Intemann, Alfred C, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Jabine, William, A.B. 1907 Yonkers, N. Y.
Katzenstein, Charles Jackson, A.B. Univ. of N. Carolina 1907 .Warren Plains, N. C.
Kelly, Leo Charles, A.B. Wabash 1907 Crawfordsville, Ind.
Kelley, Walter Edward, A.B. 1907 New York City
Kent, Towner, A.B. Yale 1906 Patterson, N. Y.
Kernan, Cline W., A.B. Tulane 1907 Baton Rouge, La.
Klepper, Milton Reed, A.B. State College of Wash. 1709 Pullman, Wash.
Kobbe, F. William, A.B. 1907 New York City
Latourette, John Randolph, A.B. Univ. of Oregon 1907 ....Oregon City, Ore.
Lavery, Urban Augustin, A.M. Univ. Penn. 1907 Lavery, Penn.
Levy, Arthur S., Jr., A.B. 1907 New York City
Libbey, William Earle, A.B. Hamilton College 1907 Clinton, N. Y.
McCanliss, Lee E., A.B. Wabash 1907 Rockville, Ind.
McCormick, Washington Jay, A.B. Harvard 1907 Missoula, Montana
McGrann, William Hugh Memphis, Tenn.
McGill, Neil Worthington, A.B. Oberlin 1907 Meadville, Penn.
Mandell, Howard Jones, A.B. Yale 1907 Ellington, 111.
Martin, D. Mathews, A.B. Harvard 1907 New York City
Milholland, William Henry, A.B. Yale 1907 New York City
Moremen, Marcus L., B.S. Univ. of Florida 1907 Switzerland, Fla.
Mortimer, Albert Skelley, A.B. St. Francis Xavier .1907 New York City
Newton, Cicero Jassy, Rumania
Norris, George, A.B. 1907 New York City
O'Connell, Ambrose A., Ph.B. Notre Dame 1907 Ottumwa, la.
Parks, James Lewis, Jr., A.B. 1907 New York City
Peiser, Delwyn Walter, A.B. 1907 New York City
Pierson, Howard Olmstead, A.B. Princeton 1906 Norwalk, Conn.
Rafferty, Harry Logan, A.B. Univ. of Oregon 1907 Portland, Ore.
Rathjen, Arthur, B.S. Univ. of Rochester 1906 Rochester, N. Y.
Reilley, Fairfax Addison Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Reiner, John Louis, A.B. Univ. of Penn. 1906 Little Britain, N. Y.
NON-MATRICULATED STUDENTS 203
Reynolds, William A New York City
Robinson, John Sherman, A.B. Univ. of Michigan 1 903 Mansfield, 0.
Shan, Witson Sion Wenchow, China
Sherrer, Frank L., A.B. Lafayette 1907 East Orange, N. J.
Silverman, Herman, Ph.B. Yale 1906 New York City
Smith, Allan, A.B. Ohio Wesleyan 1906 Wilmington, Ohio
Souter, Clyde Douglas, A.B. Dartmouth 1906 Newark, N. J.
SPINGARN, Herman, A.B. Cornell 1907 New York City
Stanley, Joseph H., A.B. Univ. of Arkansas 1907 Augusta, Ark.
Terkel, Herman, W Woonsocket, R. I.
Tucker, Dudley Gilman, A.B. Harvard 1907 New York City
Tuttle, George Coolidge, A.B. Yale 1907 New York City
Van Dewater, Williams Collins, A.B. Princeton 1907 Princeton, N. J-
Ullman, Karl Burwell, A.B. Oberlin 1907 Londonville, Ohio
Untermyer, Irwin New York City
Walker, Edward Washburn, A.B. Princeton 1907 New York City
Washburn, William Mayhew, A.B. Harvard 1908 New York City
Weltner, Philip Robert, A.B. Univ. of Georgia 1907 Columbia, S. C_
First Year — Class of 1910 85
Non-Matriculated Students
Adams, Frederic Leonard, A.B. Yale 1905, LL.B. N. Y. Law 1907. .Summit, N. J.
Chamberlain, Joseph Perkins, LL.B. Hastings 1898 Cleveland, O.
Dawkins, Spencer Morgan, A.B. Wofford 1903 Spartanburg, S. C
Feitel, Nathan Hawthorne, A.B. La. State Univ. 1906 New Orleans, La.
Gray, Charles Pierson, LL.B. Indiana Law School 1900 Pennville, Ind.
Haas, Emil M., A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904, LL.B. N. Y. U. 1907 New York City
Hirata, Aikichi Kagoshima, Japan
Johnson, William Kurtz, A.B. Yale 1906 Washington, D. C.
Josey, Edwin Bruce, A.B. Wake Forest 1905 Scotland Neck, N. C.
Lanzit, Mortimer New York City
Levy, Bertram New York City
Megrew, George Plainfield, N. J.
Ragsdale, Oren M., A.B. Yale 1907 Franklin, Ind.
Richter, Robert M New York City
Sommers, Samuel A Cincinnati, Ohio
Stakura, Takuyo Tokyo, Japan
Talcott, Walter Leroy, B.S. Valparaiso Univ. 1903 Valparaiso, Ind.
Thornton, Albert Edward, A.B. Yale 1906 Atlanta, Ga.
Van Wyck, William New York City
Wells, John David Wilson, N. C.
Non-matriculated 20
SUMMARY
Third Year — Class of 1908 59
Second Year — Class of 1909 83
First Year — Class of 19 10 85
Non-Matriculated Students 20
247
Seniors from Columbia College 18
Total 265
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
Officers of the Faculty
Samuel W. Lambert, A.M., M.D Dean and Member of the Univer-
sity Council ex-ofjicio
Walter B. James, M.D., LL.D. (term expires 19 10) . . .Elected Delegate
to the University Council
William J. Gies, M.S., Ph.D Secretary
Standing Committees
On Administration:
The Dean (Chairman), Professors Curtis, James, Brewer, and
Cragin
On Admissions:
The Dean (Chairman), Professors Prudden and Starr
On Scholarships:
The Dean (Chairman), Professors Blake and Gies
On Students' Library:
Professors Prudden (Chairman), Huntington, and Starr
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D. (Cantab.), Litt.D.. (Oxon.)
President
John G. Curtis, M.D., LL.D Professor of Physiology
M. Allen Starr, M.D., LL.D., Sc.D Professor of Neurology
George S. Huntington, M.D., Sc.D., LL.D. . . .Professor of Anatomy
T. Mitchell Prudden, M.D., LL.D Professor of Pathology
Edwin B. Cragin, A.M., M.D.. ..Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Walter B. James, M.D., LL.D Bard Professor of the Practice of
Medicine
William J. Gies, M.S., Ph.D Professor of Biological
Chemistry
L. Emmett Holt, M.D., LL.D., Sc.D Carpentier Professor of
Diseases of Children
Philip Hanson Hiss, Jr., M.D Professor of Bacteriology
Christian A. Herter, M.D Professor of Pharmacology and
Therapeutics
204
BUILDINGS, GROUNDS, AND EQUIPMENT 205
Joseph A. Blake, M.D Professor of Surgery
Samuel W. Lambert, A.M., M.D.. ..Professor of Applied Therapeutics
George E. Brewer, M.D Professor of Clinical Surgery
Francis Carter Wood, M.D Professor of Clinical Pathology
Harry McMahon Painter, M.D Professor of Clinical Obstetrics
Emeritus Professors
(See page xvi).
HISTORICAL STATEMENT
Kings College — the original foundation of Columbia University —
organized a Medical Faculty in 1767 and was the first institution in the
North American Colonies to confer the degree of Doctor of Medicine in
course. The first individuals to graduate in medicine from the College
were Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissam, who received the degree of
Bachelor of Medicine in May, 1769, and that of Doctor of Medicine
in May, 1770, and May, 1771, respectively. Instruction in medicine
was given from this time on until the work of the College was broken
up by the War of the Revolution. In 1784 an act was passed making
Columbia College in the City of New York the successor of Kings
College, and instruction was resumed in the academic department.
Eight years later the Medical Faculty was re-established, and was con-
tinued until 1 8 14, when the Medical Faculty of Columbia College was
merged in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, which had received
an independent charter in 1807. In i860, by agreement between the
Trustees of the two institutions, the College of Physicians and Surgeons
became the medical department of Columbia College, and from that
time on the diplomas of the graduates were signed by the President
of Columbia College as well as by the President of the College of
Physicians and Surgeons. The connection was only a nominal one,
however, until 1891, when the College was definitely merged in the
University.
Since i860 the degree of Doctor of Medicine has been conferred by
Columbia University on 5786 men, including many of the most eminent
practitioners in the United States.
BUILDINGS, GROUNDS, AND EQUIPMENT
The College of Physicians and Surgeons was first situated at 18
Robinson Street, from 1807 to 1809. From 1809 to 1813 it was at 12
Magazine Street; from 1813 to 1837 at 3 Barclay Street; from 1837 to
1S56 at 67 Crosby Street; and from 1856 to 1887 at 101 East Twenty-
third Street. It now occupies a group of buildings given by the
late William H. Vanderbilt, his sons Cornelius, William K., Frederick
W., and George W. Vanderbilt, and by William D. Sloane, which
stands upon thirty contiguous lots of land, bounded on the south,
west, and north by Fifty-ninth Street, Amsterdam Avenue, and
206 SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Sixtieth Street, respectively, and lying immediately opposite to the
Roosevelt Hospital.
The Main Building
The College Building proper has been designed to facilitate the
combination of theoretical instruction with laboratory work, which is
essential to a modern scientific training. In this building, which has a
floor space of 100,000 square feet, are the lecture halls, the recitation
rooms, and the different laboratories, under the supervision of their
respective professors, all thoroughly equipped for the routine work of
the regular classes and for the special original and research work of
the advanced students, instructors, and professors of the several
departments.
In this building are the administrative offices, the laboratories of
Physiology, General and Physiological Chemistry, Surgery, Pharma-
cology and Pharmaceutics, the Morphological Museums and Labo-
ratory, a dissecting room accommodating 400 students, and two large
amphitheatres.
For a more detailed account of the equipment of each department
see the departmental statements.
Vanderbilt Clinic
Board of Managers: Mr. Frederick W. Vanderbilt, Dr. S. W.
Lambert, Dean, Dr. Timothy M. Cheesman, Dr. Joseph A. Blake and
Dr. Francis C. Wood.
The Vanderbilt Clinic is a fully equipped dispensary for the sick
poor. It also affords ample material for extended practical clinical
instruction in the various departments of Medicine and Surgery, as the
professors, with their clinical assistants, have the entire charge of its
practice.
The building is so arranged that each department has a room for the
practical instruction of students in small sections, in addition to the
rooms devoted to the treatment of patients; besides, there is a large
theatre for clinical lectures and a smaller lecture hall.
All modern appliances for the treatment of diseases have been intro-
duced, so that students can learn thoroughly the use of all methods in
each of the special departments of medicine.
During the year 1906, 47,941 patients were treated, making 163,733
visits to the Clinic.
For detailed information as to the clinical lectures held here, see the
departmental statements in this volume, or the Announcement of the
College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Sloane Maternity Hospital
Board of Managers: Mr. William D. Sloane, Dr. S. W. Lambert,
GENERAL PLAN OF INSTRUCTION 207
Dean, Dr. T. Mitchell Prudden, Dr. Edwin B. Cragin, and Mr. George
L. Rives.
The Sloane Maternity Hospital is situated at the corner of Fifty-
ninth Street and Amsterdam Avenue, and the service is under the
exclusive direction of the Professor of Obstetrics in the College of
Physicians and Surgeons, the Instructor in Obstetrics being the Resi-
dent Physician. The wards of the Hospital furnish one hundred and
twenty-seven beds, and there are ample accommodations for the house
staff, students, and nurses. The operating room is equipped with all
modern surgical and obstetrical conveniences, and Professor Cragin
holds weekly clinics here for third-year class during the first half of the
year.
The number of deliveries averages over fifteen hundred a year.
These, with the obstetric operations and the subsequent treatment of
women and infants, afford invaluable practical experience.
Clinics at the Hospitals
The College is strongly represented on the staffs of most of the gen-
eral and special hospitals of New York. In them both required and
optional practical instruction is given by clinical lectures, in the dis-
pensaries and at the bedside, all of which are prominent features of
the curriculum. These hospitals are as follows: Roosevelt, Bellevue,
New York, Presbyterian, St. Luke's, General Memorial, Hospital for
the Ruptured and Crippled, St. Mary's Free Hospital for Children,
Willard Parker, Scarlet Fever and Reception, Riverside, New York
Eye and Ear Infirmary, Foundling, the Babies Hospital, New York
Ophthalmic and Aural Institute, the Manhattan Eye, Ear, and Throat
Hospital, and the Woman's Hospital. For a detailed statement see
the Announcement of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Lectures
Cartwright Lectures of the Alumni Association — According to
the provisions of the Cartwright Trust there is biennially given, under
the auspices of the Alumni Association, a course of lectures more
especially addressed to graduates in medicine. This course was de-
livered during the session of 1905-06 by Baron Kanehiro Takaki,
Surgeon General (Reserve) of the Japanese Navy.
GENERAL PLAN OF INSTRUCTION
The prescribed period of study for the degree of Doctor of Medicine
is four years. The requirements for admission are given elsewhere,
but too much stress cannot be laid upon the desirability of a student
fulfilling the spirit as well as the mere letter of those requirements.
Physics and general chemistry are now required for admission, and
the student of medicine will grasp the advanced subjects forming the
208 SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
groundwork of the course the more easily and with the better under-
standing just in proportion to the breadth and completeness of his
preliminary education. This is especially true of the student who
has added to his physics and chemistry a sufficient knowledge of
general biology, which though not required is an essential part of
a thorough medical education. The attention of students is particu-
larly called to the regulations of Columbia College (see page 171) which
permit a student to obtain a thorough preliminary training and at the
same time to complete the requirements for the degree of A.B. or B.S.
and the degree of M.D. in six years.
In the arrangement of the different branches of the medical in-
struction a logical order of the main themes and a co-ordination in
the work of each department have been sought after, enabling the
student to concentrate his attention upon some subject and to be
so familiar with it that the allied subjects next to be taken up shall be
readily understood. The salient features in the method of instruction
are thorough laboratory training, frequent demonstrations, clinical
teaching in the operating theatres and at the bedside as well as in the
dispensaries, with recitations and didactic lectures to elucidate the
many problems confronting the student.
Records of attendance and scholarship are kept, and before a
student may advance with his class he must, besides passing a good
examination in a subject, present certificates of satisfactory practical
work.
In the first half of the first year the time of the student is devoted
largely to anatomy. The instruction is carried on mainly by numer-
ous demonstrations to sections and by long periods of uninterrupted
work in the dissecting room. In this part of the year pharmacy
laboratory work is begun, organic and physical chemistry is dealt
with and taught by didactic lectures, recitations, and laboratory
exercises, and histology is begun. In the second half of the first
year the study of physiology is begun, for which the students have
been prepared by a course in mammalian morphology. Physiology
is taught by did actic lectures, demonstrations, recitations, and prac-
tical work in the laboratory. Physiological chemistry is studied in the
laboratory and by lectures and recitations. Anatomy is continued
and the course in histology and embryology is completed.
In the second year anatomy and physiology are completed. The
lectures in materia medica are begun and lectures, recitations, and
laboratory courses in pharmacology and bacteriology and hygiene
are attended. As preliminary to the third and fourth years, recita-
tions from text-books are held in medicine, obstetrics, materia medica,
and surgery. For the second half of the second year the students are
assigned to the laboratory for work in pathology and pathological
anatomy, and attendance at autopsies is required.
During the third year recitations in medicine and surgery are con-
REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION 209
tinued and those in gynecology, diseases of children, and therapeutics
are begun. There are didactic as well as clinical lectures in medicine,
surgery, pharmacology and therapeutics, obstetrics, gynecology, neu-
rology, genito-urinary diseases, laryngology, otology, ophthalmology,
dermatology, orthopedic surgery and diseases of children. During the
year the work in pathological anatomy and clinical pathology is com-
pleted. The class is divided into small sections for instruction in
physical diagnosis, and in the special branches of medicine and surgery
at the various dispensaries and hospitals.
The student in the fourth year spends most of his time in the hos-
pitals and dispensaries of the city. Consequently, although a few
general and clinical lectures are still given, the work is almost entirely
practical and bedside instruction. Divided into small groups, the
students continue to come into personal contact with patients, under
the supervision of the instructor. In this way they have the oppor-
tunity to become familiar with the history of a case, to make a com-
plete physical examination, to form a diagnosis, to give a prognosis,
to advise treatment, and to watch progress.
In the course in surgery the witnessing of numerous major and
minor operations is supplemented by an operative course in which the
student himself performs on the cadaver many of the more common
operations. For an obstetrical service, the unsurpassed facilities of
the Sloane Maternity Hospital offer excellent opportunities. Here
the student is required to live for two weeks and personally attend
a certain number of cases of labor. The course is rounded out by per-
sonal instruction in the more special branches of medicine. In these
branches the student is taught how to use many instruments of pre-
cision and to recognize and treat successfully many of the rarer forms
of disease.
REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION
To the First-Year Class
All candidates for the degree of Doctor of Medicine must present
the medical-student certificate of the Regents of the University of the
State of New York, and must have obtained the same only on the basis of
one or the other of the certificates named below:
1. A certificate indicating (a) that the candidate has completed at
least one full year's course of study in a college or scientific school,
registered by the Regents as maintaining a satisfactory standard; (b)
that he holds a bachelor's degree in arts or science, or its substantial
equivalent conferred by any registered institution in France or Spain ;
(c) that he is graduated from a registered gymnasium in Germany,
Austria, or Russia, or has completed a course of study equivalent
thereto — as, for example, a course of five years in a registered Italian
ginnasio and three years in a liceo.
2IO SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
2. A certificate of the result of an examination conducted in June
of any year by the College Entrance Examination Board, or in January
or September of any year under the auspices of the Columbia University
Committee on Entrance Examinations, or in part for both of these,
in the subjects enumerated below. These three sets of examinations
are held upon the same requirements and are substantially the same
in standard administration. Candidates may forward their cre-
dentials received from either or both of these examining authorities
to the Examinations Division, State of New York Education Depart-
ment, Albany, N. Y., and if they aggregate the necessary 15 points will
receive in exchange therefor the medical-student certificate required
for admission to the College of Physicians and Surgeons. No part of
the requirements which a candidate may pass will be allowed to stand
to his credit for a longer period than twenty-eight months.
The examination subjects from which the candidate for admission to
the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1908-09 must make his
selections are as follows. (A "point " is regarded as being the equiva-
lent of a course of study of five weekly periods throughout the academic
year.)
COUNTING IN POINTS
The candidate must offer:
English 3
Elementary French )
or j- 2
Elementary German )
Elementary Latin (see page 161) 2
Elementary Mathematics 3
Elementary Physics 1
Inorganic Chemistry 1
Total 12
The 3 additional points may be offered from the following subjects,
the only restriction being that to offer an advanced subject will in-
volve offering, either at the same time or earlier, the corresponding
elementary subject.
COUNTING IN POINTS
Elementary French )
or [■ 2
Elementary German (see above) )
Elementary Greek 3
Elementary History 2
Elementary Latin (see page 161) 2
Botany 1
Drawing 1
Physiography 1
Spanish 2
Zoology1 1
Intermediate French 1
Intermediate German 1
• [Candidates will be examined in this subject only in January and September.
REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION 21 1
COUNTING IN POINTS
Advanced Greek1
Advanced History1
Advanced Latin1
Advanced Mathematics
Advanced Physics'
For full definition of the above requirements and for information
regarding the times and places at which entrance examinations are
held, regulations regarding division of examinations, examinations
outside of New York, application blank, and examination fee, see
pages 154-163.
Admission with Conditions
Candidates who do not receive a grade at least C (fair — 60 % to
75 %) in subjects amounting to at least 12 of the 15 points offered
will be rejected.
Candidates who receive a grade of C (fair — 60% to 75%) in sub-
jects amounting to not less than 12 of the 15 points offered, will be
admitted conditionally, under such stipulations as the Committee on
Admissions of the Faculty of Medicine may impose; but, in every case,
conditions imposed at entrance must be removed before the student
is admitted to the second year of the course. Such candidates must
submit to the Committee their credits from the College Entrance
Examination Board and from the University Committee on Entrance
Examinations of Columbia University on or before September 25, 1907.
To Advanced Standing
Admission may be granted to advanced standing at the beginning of
the second or third year, and, with the special consent of the Faculty,
of the fourth year.
Every applicant for advanced standing will be required (1) to pre-
sent evidence of having had a sufficient preliminary education, meeting
the requirements for admission to the first-year class; (2) to present
satisfactory evidence of having attended, in a recognized medical
school, courses reasonably equivalent to those already attended by the
class to which he seeks admission; (3) to be examined for admission
in all the subjects in which the said class shall have been examined
already.
No certificate or diploma will be accepted in lieu of these examina-
tions for advanced standing.
A candidate for admission to advanced standing at the beginning of
the second or third year may be so admitted either unconditionally or
conditionally. In the latter case, his admission will be upon the same
terms as govern students who have pursued at this College the curricu-
lum of the first or second year.
1 Candidates will be examined in this subject only in January and September.
212 SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
During the week before the opening of the academic year examina-
tions in each subject of the curriculum of the Medical School will be
held for delinquent students and for candidates for admission to ad-
vanced standing.
As Special Students
Students desiring to do special work at the College of Physicians and
Surgeons may register at any time during the year as special stu-
dents. Such applicants, however, cannot subsequently become can-
didates for graduation without full compliance with the terms of
admission and graduation.
Special students will be required to present to the Committee on
Admission before entrance evidence of (a) an adequate preliminary
education, and (b) special fitness for the particular work they desire
to pursue.
REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATION
Every candidate in the four-year course will be required before
admission to the degree of M.D.:
i. To present satisfactory evidence, as required by law, of good
moral character, and of having attained the age of twenty-one years.
2. To present evidence of having complied with the requirements
for admission.
3. To have attained to satisfactory standing in the required studies
of the four years of the curriculum. See table, page 213.
4. A candidate who shall have been admitted to advanced standing
will be required to have spent not less than four academic years at the
studies referred to in the clause next preceding; and to have complied
successfully with the requirements for admission to advanced standing.
No two academic years which shall have begun during the same
calendar year will be held to satisfy the requirements of the above
clause.
The Degree of Master of Arts
The attention of students of Medicine is directed to Rule 10 of the
Regulations for the Higher Degrees (page 169).
COURSE OF STUDY
213
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214 SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
SCHOLARSHIPS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND PRIZES
See page 405
EQUIPMENT AND COLLECTIONS
Detailed information as to the laboratories, collections, and other
facilities for study will be found in the statements of the various
departments of instruction, pages 41-153, and more fully in the An-
nouncement of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.
REQUIREMENTS FOR LICENSE TO PRACTICE MEDICINE IN
NEW YORK STATE
For information, see the Announcement of the College of Physicians
and Surgeons.
SUMMER SESSION IN MEDICINE
Practical courses in medicine, varying from three to six weeks in
length, for the benefit of practising physicians who desire opportunities
for additional study and investigation, as well as for properly qualified
students of medicine and surgery, are given in June, July, and August
of each year.
A general statement of the work offered will be found in connection
with the statement of the Summer Session (see the Table of Contents),
this volume, and a detailed announcement, showing the scope of each
course, the conditions under which it is given, and the fee charged,
will be sent upon application to the Secretary of Columbia University,
New York City.
Students who have satisfactorily completed the practical clinical
courses in this Summer Session may be excused from equivalent
courses required for the degree of M.D.
REGISTER OF STUDENTS
School of Medicine
FOURTH YEAR— CLASS OF 1908
« Axelrad, Jacob, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1902 Brooklyn, N. Y.
C Baegel, Max New York City
-—OBaehr, George New York City
— >CBarnett, Nathaniel New York City
C Bates, Edwin Cassius St. Stephen, N. B.
*""*£ Blakely, Stuart Banyar, A.B. Hamilton 1903, A.M. 1906 Otsego, N. Y.
—• CBloomgarden, Aaron Samuel Bayonne, N. J.
~*-C-Bowers, Wesley Creveling, A.B. Princeton 1904 Washington, N. J.
"-CBrenner, Edward Christopher, A.B.C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
C Brown, Francis Earl, B.S. Illinois Wesleyan 1903 Los Angeles, Cal.
*-^C-Brownell, Everett Garnsey, A.B. Union 1900 Boston, Mass.
— C-Burke, Rush Pearson Montgomery, Ala.
B.Sc. Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1903, M.Sc, 1904
*"" ^Burnett, Thomas Ward Summit, N. Y.
CCanto, Isidro Herrera, B.S. Boston 1900 Merida, Yucatan, Mexico
—"""^-Carlucci, Gaston Arthur New York City
""^•CCassebeer, Alfred Frederick Rochester, N. Y.
"""•^Cassini, Herman Gesar Orange, N. J.
CjCoble, Morris Solomon, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
""■tCoMMORATO, John Ralph New York City
CDudley, Lionel Elwood, A.B. Colby 1903 Mapleton, Me.
""^ Farrell, John Raymond New York City
^Feldman, Joel William New York City
£• Fernandez, Francisco Maria y Hernandez Bolondron, Matanzas, Cuba
B.S. Univ. Havana 1901
^Folsom, Ralph Parker, A.B. Dartmouth 1897 Oldtown, Me.
** ''Fulda, Harry Christian Brooklyn, N. Y.
—-C-Furst, Sidney, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
"*■ 6-Geist, Samuel Herbert, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
C^Gelb, Louis New York City
C-Goldberg, Abraham Rockaway Beach, N. Y.
*-"C-Graves, Arthur Coon Adams Centre, N. Y.
CGray, John Henry Port Murray, N. J.
— CGreenberg, Louis, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
■^■•CHangarter, Andrew Henry, A.B Brooklyn, N. Y.
Canisius College, Buffalo 1904, A.M. 1906.
^—C^Hayward, Vincent Sumner New York City
«"»»C-Herbermann, Charles George, Jr., A.B. St. Francis Xavier 1904 New York City
--C-Humphreys, George Hoppin, Ph.B. Yale 1898 New York City
C-Hunt, J. Jay Bayonne, N. J.
C-Johnson, Travis James Augustus, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
•^CKleinberg, Samuel Brooklyn, N. Y.
CKramer, Isaac Golde, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1899 New York City
■^CLeber, Otto Herman, A.B. 1904 Hoboken, N. J.
215
216 SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
••••C Levy, Isadore Jesse, Ph.B. Syracuse 1904 Syracuse, N. Y.
C Littenberg, Samuel Joshua, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
"~»C McCarthy, Charles Aloysius Lawrence, Mass.
*""*C McCluskey, Richard John Lowell, Mass.
— ^CMcLean, Cornelius Stafford Newburgh, N. Y.
^•CMichailovsky, Benjamin, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1899 New York City
"~"»C Mitchell, William Wright, M.D Olive Branch, Miss.
Memphis Hospital Medical College 1907
*"*C Monroe, Otho Lee, B.S. Ohio Wesleyan 1904 Galion, Ohio
— CNilsen, Arthur, A.B. Yale 1904 New York City
CPershing, Cyrus Long, B.S. Princeton 1889 Pottsville, Pa.
•"■^Porter, Charles Hunt, Jr., A.B. Harvard 1892 Newport, R. I.
"■"CRamsdell, Edwin George, A.B. 1905 New York City
cReed, Dudley Billings, A.B. Oberlin 1903 Madison, Wis.
" *~ Roberts, William Hawley Attleboro, Mass.
•"•■C-Rockey, Paul Portland, Ore.
*"""C Roome, Clarence Tyley, A.B. Oberlin 1904 Berwyn, 111.
~ "*C Rutledge, William Cloud, A.B. Ohio Wesleyan 1903 Duncan Falls, Ohio
"""C Sch aeffer, Samuel New London, Conn.
"■••^ Sibbel, Armin Joseph, A.B. St. John's, Fordham, 1904 New York City
•^C- Silleck, Walter Mandeville, B.S. New York Univ. 1904 New York City
— t Simons, Irving, B.S. Vanderbilt 1904 Nashville, Tenn.
tSLOANE, Francis Johnston, A.B. Princeton 1904 New York City
y~ <^Smith, Walter Monty Glens Falls, N. Y.
—•■^Soper, Willard Burr, A.B. Yale 1904 Bloomington, 111.
"^Strong, Archibald McIntyre, A.B Princeton 1904 New York City
'c-Sturtevant, Mills Gove, A.B. Dartmouth 1904 Manchester, N. H,
^Tarbell, Frank Washington, A.B. Colby 1904 Smyrna Mills, Me.
O* Ten Brook, Glen John Rockville, Ind.
C-Tompkins, Grenelle Bertram, A.B. 1905 Paterson, N. J.
'""C- Touart, Maximin De Mouy, A.B. Spring Hill College 1903, A.M. 1905. . . .Mobile, Ala.
■■"C/Turner, Paul Akers, A.B. Amherst 1904 Portland, Me.
*"*-C-Vail, LeRoy Benjamin, B.S. Dartmouth 1904 Brooklyn, N. Y.
' C Ward, William Trulock Willard City, Utah
""^CWaring, Antonio Johnston, A.B. Yale 1903 Savannah, Ga.
"**■*■ Wessler, Harry, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
^Whipple, Allen Oldfather, B.S. Princeton 1904 Duluth, Minn.
"*c Whitney, George Crosier, A.B. Rochester 1904 Rochester, N. Y.
"""^Yerington, Henry Herbert Carson, City, Nev.
m "C-Zelaya, Anibal Managua, Nicaragua, C. A.
Fourth Year — Class of 1 908 80
THIRD YEAR— CLASS OF 1909
Abrons, Harry New York City
Adams, Phineas Hillhouse, A.B. Harvard 1905 New York City
Ames, James Sidney, Ph.B. Wesleyan 1905 Binghamton, N. Y.
Ayres, Daniel Roe, A.B. Harvard 190s Montclair, N. J.
Bendick, Arthur Jerome Tompkinsville, S. I.
Benton, Nelson Kingsbury, A.B. 1906 Newark, N. J.
Block, Alvin Phillip New York City
Blum, Hugo New Brunswick, N. J .
Bradshaw, William, M., A.B. Princeton 190s New York City
Bulkley, Kenneth, A.B. 1906 New York City
Burnap, Sidney Rogers, A.B. Yale 190s Windsor Locks, Conn.
Campbell, Francis William, A.B. St. John's, Brooklyn, 1905. .. .Brooklyn, N. Y.
Casey, John Francis New London, Conn.
Child, Frank Samuel, Jr., Ph.B. Hamilton 1903, Ph.M. 1906 Fairfield, Conn.
THIRD YEAR CLASS 217
Cohn, Sidney, A. B.C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Cowherd, Joseph Bird, B.S. Central University 1 90s Shelbyville, Ky .
Echevkrkia, Frederick John, A.B. 190s New York City
Ehrenrlich, Samuel New York City
Elliott, Edsall DuBois, A.B. 1906 Catskill, N. Y. £*—
Bmsbbihbr, Herbert, A.B. 1906 Wheeling, W. Va.
English, John Theodore, Ph.B. Lafayette 1905 Elizabeth, N. J.
Evans, Edward Richard, A.B. Hamilton 1905 Remsen, N. Y.
Evans, John Hinman, A.B. 1906 Montclair, N. J.
Fauver, Edgar, A.B. Oberlin 1899 Oberlin, Ohio
Fauver, Edwin, A.B. Oberlin 1899 Oberlin, Ohio
Findeisen, William Ernst Brooklyn, N. Y.
Fosh a y, John Russell Peekskill, N. Y.
Fowler. Robert Henry, A.B. 1906 New York City
Fulton, Clifford Harry, A.B. Williams 1905 New Rochelle, N. Y.
Gossett, Abraham Joseph New York City
Hale, Fraray, Jr., B.S. Amherst 190s Wallingford, Conn.
Heaton, Dwight Ruggles Perry, A.B. Yale 1906. . . . Riverdale-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Hewitt, Ralph Halladay, A.B. Amherst 1905 New London, Conn.
Hofheimer, Alexander, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Hyde, Clarence Elmer, A.B. Stanford 1905 Cupertino, Cal.
Janvrin, Edmund Randolph Peaslee, A.B. Princeton 1905 New York City
Johnson, William Clinton, A.B. Williams 1905 Summit, N. J.
Krauss, Fletcher Irvin, A.B. 1906 East Orange, N. J.
Kutscher, Samuel, Ph.G., Ph.C. 1905 N. Y. Coll. of Phar'y. • .Stapleton, S. I., N. Y.
Lancer, John Joseph New York City
LaVake, Rae Thornton, A.B. Yale 1905 Rosebank, S. I., N. Y.
Lavandera, Miguel Vega de Rivadeo, Spain
Lyman, George Dunlap, A.B. Stanford 1905 Los Angeles, Cal.
Mandeville, Frank Nesler, Ph.B. Brown 1905 Newark, N. J-
Mayer, Leo, A.B. Harvard. 1905, A.M. 1906 New York City
McDonald, John Oliver, A.B. Princeton 1905 Englishtown, N. J.
Morris, Dudley Henry, A.B. 1905 New York City
Mott, Walter Wesley, A.B. 1905 New York City
Olsan, Hiram, Ph.B. Univ. Rochester 1905 Rochester, N. Y.
Pardee, Harold Ensign Bennett, A.B. 1906 New York City
Paton, Fred Wade, A.B. Hamilton 1905 Bradford, Pa.
Popper, Joseph New York City
Rainsford, Laurence Frederick, A.B. Harvard 1904 New York City
Ranson, Alonzo Ainsworth, A.B. Rutgers 1901, A.M. 1904 Havana, 111.
Richardson, Charles Hyatt, Jr., Ph.B. Emory 1904 Montezuma, Ga.
Rosenbloom, Jacob, B.S. Western Univ. Penn. 1905 Braddock, Pa.
Rosensohn, Meyer., B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1901 New York City
Rosenthal, Leo Brooks, A.B. 1906 New York City
Schaie, Milton New York City
Shanley, Thomas James New Haven, Conn.
Smith, Frank Carlier Brooklyn, N. Y.
St. John, Fordyce Barker, B.S. Princeton 1905 Hackensack, N. J.
Steiner, Stanley Harold, A.B. 1906 New York City
Stork, Victor Eytinge, A.B. Stanford 1905 Seattle, Wash.
Sullivan, Arthur George Eau Claire, Wis.
VlRa, Tomas Antonio y Almazan Santiago de Cuba, Cuba
Wade, Simon Franklin, A.B. Princeton 1905 Hackettstown, N. J.
Walther, John Woodward Astoria, L. I., N. Y.
Wardner, Drew Mallon Pelham Manor, N. Y.Jlfc"
West, Davenport, A.B. Princeton 1905 Galveston, Texas <*
White, John Laurence, A.B. St. Francis Xavier 1899, A.M. 1900. .Perth Amboy, N. J.
218 SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Wieselthier, Maurice Louis, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Wilkerson, Fred Wooten Montgomery, Ala.
Wronker, Benno Maurice, A.B. 1906 New York City
Yergason, Robert Moseley Hartford, Conn.
Zimmermann, Harry Bernard St. Paul, Minn.
Third year — Class of 1909 76
SECOND YEAR— CLASS OF 19 10
Bannon, William Joseph Westerly, R. I.
Baumann, Oscar Israel, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Beck, David New York City £•*>
Bell, Harold Kennedy, A.B Flushing, L.I.
Beller, Abraham Jacob, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Bender, Theodore Paterson, N. J.
Bibby, Harry Lambert Paterson, N. J.
Blaber, Murtha Paul, A.B. St. Francis 1906 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Blum, Julius, A.B. 1906 New York City
Bockshitzky, Solomon Slutzk, Russia
Brown, Frederick Lane, A.B. Princeton 1905 Somerville, N. J.
Campus, Ellis, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Cohen, Harold Aaron, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Cohen, Samuel, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Cole, Philip Gillett Helena, Mont.
Devendorf, Frederick Christopher, B.S Herkimer, N. J.
St. Lawrence University 1905
Dieterich, Frederick Henry New York City
Donnelly, Joseph Edward, A.B. St. Francis Xavier 1903 New York City
Falkowitz, Henry Charles New York City
Feldstein, George Moses Kholmsk, Russia
Ford, James Smith Newark, N. J.
Freeman, Anthony Curt, A.B. Stanford 1906 Chicago, 111.
Friedson, Morris, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
Fuhrman, Herman Charles Brooklyn, N. Y.
Furman, Benjamin Applegate, A.B. Princeton 1906 Newark, N. J.
Goldberg, Victor, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Goodfriend, Harry New York City
Gottlieb, Abraham Riga, Russia
Henes, Edwin, Jr., A.B. 1907 New York City
Hildreth, William Warren, A.B. Princeton 1906 Southampton, L. I.
Hoyt, Randal Edward, B.S. Princeton 1905 St. Louis, Mo.
Hubbard, Thomas Brannon, A.B. Washington and Lee 1906. . .Montgomery, Ala.
Ill, Edgar Alexander, B.S. Princeton 1906 Newark, N. J.
Jackson, James Albert, Jr Madison, Wis.
Lebendig, Abraham Rochester, N. Y.
Long, William Bayard Spring Lake, N. J.
McAlpin, Kenneth Rose, A.B. Princeton 1905, A.M. 1906 Ossining, N. Y.
McBurney, Malcolm, A.B. Harvard 1906 New York City
McCreery, John Alexander, A.B. Harvard 1906, A.M. 1907 New York City
McKay, Walter Wyatt, A.B. Oberlin 1905 Sharon, Pa.
M artland, Ralph, A.B Newark, N. J.
Mixsell, Harold Ruckman, A.B. Princeton 1906 Easton, Pa.
Moore, Francis William, Jr Brooklyn, N. Y.
Neergaard, Arthur Edwin, A.B. Yale 1904 Concord, N. H.
Pascale, Vincenzo New York City
Perkins, Edward Carter, A.B. Yale 1898 Yonkers, N. Y.
Poll, Daniel Brooklyn, N. Y. (Senior) 4
AMSTEF\DAM
AVENUE
COLUMBUS
AVENUE
FIRST YEAR CLASS 219
Porter, Edward Evelyn New York City (Senior)
Reed, Howard Beck, B.S. Princeton 1906 Seabright, N. J.
Reidy, Maurice Joseph Winsted, Conn.
Ridge, Frank Isaac Kansas City, Mo.
Rosenbaum, Charles New York City
Ross, Carl Thorburn, A.B. Stanford 1906 Astoria, Ore.
♦Sanford, Charles Henry New York City
Sweeney, Morris Mott, B.S. Colgate 1903 Hamilton, N. Y.
Swick, David Aaron, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1899 New York City
Swift, Percy Edward New York City
Terry, Arthur Hutchinson, Jr. A.B. Yale 1906 Patchogue, L. I.
Tooker, Norman Brown, A.B. Princeton 1906 East Orange, N. J.
Utter, Henry Edwin, A.B. Amherst 1906 Westerly, R. I.
Van Etten, Royal Cornelius, A.B. Amherst 1906 Rhinebeck, N. Y.
Warren, Edmund Levings St. Paul, Minn.
Webster, David Henry, A.B. Acadia 1906 Cambridge Station, Nova Scotia
Weingart, Julius Shaw, A.B. Tarkio 1905 Clearfield, Iowa
Wiener, Herbert Joseph, A.B. Harvard 1906 New York City 110
Wilds, Robert Henry, B.S. South Carolina College 1904 Columbia, S. C.
Worcester, James Newbegin, A.B. Amherst 1906 Bloomfield, N. J.
Second Year — Class of 1910 67
FIRST YEAR— CLASS OF 19 11
Ackerman, Philip Crampton, A.B. Harvard 1906 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Ackerman, Stephen Hulbert, Jr., A.B. Harvard 1907 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Alexander, Hugo, B.S. New York University 1907 Hoboken, N. J.
Alling, Frederic Augustus, B.S. Princeton 1907 Newark, N. J.
Anderton, Walter Palmer, A.B. (June 1908) Harvard New York City
Ashe, John Rainey, Graduate of S. C. Military Academy Yorkville, S. C.
Bisch, Louis Edward, A.B. 1907 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Blue, James Patrick, A.B New York City
St. Francis Xavier 1907 (withdrew Sept. 26)
Bruckheimer, Ralph Monroe New York City
Chilian, Stephen A New York City
Cobb, Watler Frank, Bach, of Physical Education Attleboro, Mass.
Debon, Amedee Joseph New York City
Donovan, Florence Timothy, A.B Port Richmond, S. I., N. Y.
St. Francis Xavier 1907 (withdrew Sept. 26)
De Passe, Alfred Bernard Camille New York City
Dustin, Edgar Gerald Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Eisler, Samuel New York City
Ernst, Edward Cranch Wilmette, 111.
Essig, Frank Theodore Newark, N. J.
Goodwin, Nelson Aloysius New York City
Grace, Roderick Vincent, A.B., C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Gray, John Wesley Maine, N. Y.
Haake, Charles Henry Grube New York City
Hall, Fairfax, Ph.B., Yale 1907 Binghamton, N. Y.
Herzfeld, Melvin Gustav New York City
Heyward, Nathaniel Barnwell, A.B., University of S. C. 1907 Columbia, S. C.
Hill, James Fitts Montgomery, Ala.
Hobbs, Austin Latting, A.B., Princeton 1907 East Orange, N. J.
Hubbard, Ralph Hustace, A.B. 1905 New York City
Jennings, Edward Allen, Ph.B. Wesleyan, Conn. 1907 New York City
Jones, Glen Gibson Wa-Keeney, Kansas
Knapp, Robert Phineas Saratoga Springs, N. Y. '^6
* Name changed by Judge Brady, N. Y. Supreme Court
220 SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Langstafp, Bridgewater Meredith, A.B. (June 1908) Harvard. . .Brooklyn, N. Y.
Langworthy, Howard Tracy West Edmeston, N. Y.
Levin, Louis Abe Oscar New York City
Lewis, Fred Raymond, Ph.B. University of Rochester 1907 Charlotte, N. Y.
Lynch, Kevin David, A.B. St. Peter's College, N. J. 1907 West Hoboken, N. J.
McKinlay, Charles Miles, A.B. 1907 Tenafly, N. J.
MacGuire, Constantine Joseph, Jr., A.B. Yale 1907 New York City
Mount, Guy, A.B. University of Oregon, 1907 Silverton, Oregon
Murray, Vance Bishop Fordham, N. Y.
Naughton, Henry Joseph, A.B. Holy Cross, 1906 Worcester, Mass.
O'Conor, Joseph Augustine New York City
Paffard, Howard Thomas, A.B. Williams 1907 Southport, Conn.
Petersen, Leo Smith New York City
Phipps, Howard Morton, A.B. Colgate 1907 East Rockaway, L. I.
Pratt, Edward Leander, A.B. Yale 1907 Lewiston, Me.
Robert, Daniel Rutgers, Litt.B., Princeton 1907 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Robinson, Lewis Byrne, A.B. Harvard, 1907 Oyster Bay, L. I.
Schroeder, Louis Clausen New York City
Scott, Frederick Wilson, A.B. Rutgers 1907 New Brunswick, N. J.
Shapiro, Isidor F New York City
Sheinman, Louis New York City
Spiers, Homer Waldo, A.B. Oberlin 1907 Oberlin, Ohio
Stehl, Harry Jacob New York City
Stowell, David Dudley, A.B. Colgate 1907 New York City
Sullo, Nicholas Alfred New York City
Sumner, Cyril, A.B. Yale 1907 Rochester, N. Y.
Townsend, John Wright Lockport, N. Y.
Vietor, John Adolf, A.B. Yale 1907 New York City
Ward, Mark Hopkins, A.B. Amherst 1906 Medford, Mass.
Wellington, Harold Wentworth Braintree, Mass.
Wurthmann, John William, Phar.D., N. Y. Coll. of Pharmacy 1906 . New York City
Barber, Wm. Howard — Junior from Columbia College Brooklyn, N. Y.
Bessie, Abraham — Senior from Columbia College Wahpeton, North Dakota
Bishop, Frank Warner — Junior from Columbia College New York City
Cheney, Clarence Orion — Senior from Columbia College New York City
Cobb, James Livingston — Junior from Columbia College Brooklyn, N. Y.
Cohen, Ira — Junior from Columbia College New York City
Combes, Abbott Carson, Jr. — Senior from Columbia College Elmhurst, N. Y.
Goodwin, George Munro — Junior from Columbia College. . Tompkinsville, S. I., N. Y.
Miller, Hyman Rudolph — Senior from Columbia College Brooklyn, N. Y. {_ '
Rothschild, Marcus Adolphus — Senior from Columbia College. .. .Woodville, Miss. '". V
First Year — Class of 1911 62
Juniors and Seniors from Columbia College 10 I — i
NON-MATRICULATED STUDENTS
Ballance, Charles,. . .M.D Tacoma, Wash.
Carlin, Julius Elias, B.S New York City
N. Y. University, D.D.S., N. Y. College of Dentistry
Gallagher, James Thomas, A.B. , A.M., M.D Brooklyn, N. Y.
Gasside, Charles Zeh, M.D New York City
Grube, Charles Henry, M.D New York City
Levy, William Victor, M.D Hackensack, N. J.
Love, Andrew Jackson, M.D. Meharry Med. Coll. Tenn. 1890 Canton, Miss.
Perkins, Charles Edwin, M.D New York City
Sayre, Harry Clinton, M.D Warwick, N.Y.
SUMMARY 221
Sheridan, Joseph Morton New York City
Stanaback, Ernest Coursen Newark, N. J.
Steinpelder, Jacob Jerome, M.D New York City
Wendel, Benjamin Franklin, M.D Sioux City, Iowa
Sioux City Coll. of Medicine 1906.
Non -matriculated 13
SUMMARY
Fourth Year — Class of 1908 80
Third Year — Class of 1909 76
Second Year — Class of 1910 67
First Year — Class of 1911 62
Non -matriculated (Special Students) 13
298
Juniors and Seniors from Columbia College. 10
Total 30S
j^y.&fcr* 16 L
THE SCHOOLS OF MINES, ENGINEERING, AND
CHEMISTRY
The Faculty of Applied Science
Officers of the Faculty
Frederick Arthur Goetze, M.Sc Dean
Ralph Edward Mayer, C.E Secretary
Henry S. Munroe, E.M., Ph.D., Sc.D Elected Delegate to the
University Council
Standing Committees
Committee on Administration: The Dean (Chairman), Professors
Van Amringe, Peele, Lovell, Sever.
Committee on Admissions: Professors Maclay (Chairman),
Mayer, Luquer, Stoughton, and Tucker.
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D., (Cantab.) Litt.D. (Oxon.),
President
Frederick A. Goetze, M.Sc Dean
J. Howard Van Amringe, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D Professor of
Mathematics
Charles F. Chandler, Ph.D., M.D., LL.D., Sc.D. .Mitchill Professor
of Chemistry
Henry S. Munroe, E.M., Ph.D., Sc.D Professor of Mining
Alfred J. Moses, E.M., Ph.D Professor of Mineralogy
James F. Kemp, E.M., Sc.D Professor of Geology
Robert Peele, E.M Professor of Mining
William Hallock, Ph.D Professor of Physics
Francis B. Crocker, E.M., Ph.D.. Professor of Electrical Engineering
Michael I. Pupin, Ph.D., Sc.D Professor of Electro-Mechanics
William H. Burr, C.E Professor of Civil Engineering
Thomas Scott Fiske, Ph.D Professor of Mathematics
Harold Jacoby, Ph.D Rutherfurd Professor of Astronomy
Henry M. Howe, A.M., B.S., LL.D Professor of Metallurgy
Charles E. Pellew, E.M Adjunct Professor of Chemistry
Earl B. Lovell, C.E Professor of Civil Engineering
Charles R. Richards, B.S. .Macy Professor of Manual Training in
Teachers College
George Francis Sever, M.Sc Professor of Electrical Engineering
222
COURSES 223
James Maclay, C.E., Ph.D Professor of Mathematics
Marston Taylor Bogert, A.B., Ph.B Professor of Organic
Chemistry
J. Livingston Rutgers Morgan, Ph.D Professor of Physical
Chemistry
Amadeus W. Grabau, S.D Professor of Palaeontology
Ira H. Woolson, E.M Adjunct Professor of Civil Engineering
Ralph Edward Mayer, C.E Adjunct Professor of Engineering
Drafting
Cassius Jackson Keyser, Ph.D Adrain Professor of Mathematics
Herschel C. Parker, Ph.B Adjunct Professor of Physics
George L. Meylan, A.M., M.D Adjunct Professor of Physical
Education
Lea McIlvaine Luquer, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Mineralogy
Bradley Stoughton, B.S Adjunct Professor of Metallurgy
James S. C. Wells, Ph.D.. .Adjunct Professor of Analytical Chemistry
Joseph C. Pfister, A.M Adjunct Professor of Mechanics
Henry Clapp Sherman, Ph.D Professor of Organic Analysis
Albert P. Wills, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Mechanics
Samuel A. Tucker, Ph.B Adjunct Professor of Electro-Chemistry
Adolph Black, C.E Adjunct Professor of Civil Engineering
Charles E. Lucke, M.S., Ph.D. Adjunct Professor of Mechanical
Engineering
Walter Rautenstrauch, M.S Adjunct Professor of Mechanical
Engineering
William Campbell, Ph.D., Sc.D. .Adjunct Professor of Metallography
For other officers of instruction see pages 12-18
COURSES
The Faculty of Applied Science has charge of the following schools :
The School of Mines, with four- year courses leading to the degrees
of Engineer of Mines and Metallurgical Engineer.
The Schools of Engineering, with four-year courses in Civil
Engineering, Electrical Engineering, and Mechanical Engineering,
the first two leading to the degree of Civil Engineer, and the others
to the degree of Electrical Engineer and Mechanical Engineer,
respectively.
The School of Chemistry, with four-year courses leading to the
degrees of Chemist and Chemical Engineer.
These courses are intended to meet the requirements of the several
professions indicated. Many of the courses permit a certain amount
of specialization, particularly in the fourth year.
ADMISSION
The Committee on Admissions of the Schools of Mines, Engineering ,
224 SCHOOLS OF MINES, CHEMISTRY AND ENGINEERING
and Chemistry has charge of all matters relating to this subject. Can-
didates for admission to the first-year class should be at least eighteen
years of age at the time of matriculation. For further regulations see
Admission to Columbia College, page 172
Collegiate Preparation Recommended
The liberal training offered by the preliminary Collegiate Course is
quite as important to engineers, metallurgists, and chemists as to law-
yers, physicians, or clergymen, and is strongly recommended by the
Faculty of Applied Science. This, however, does not and should not
involve a residence of eight years in college and technical school before
a candidate receives the professional degree.
A graduate of any good college who has selected his course with
reference to future work in applied science is able to complete the
requirements for a degree in the Schools of Mines, Engineering, and
Chemistry in less than four years after receiving the Bachelor's degree.
The opportunities for close articulation between Columbia College and
these schools are particularly good.
Requirements for Admission for Students without Collegiate Preparation
Every candidate must offer at the entrance examinations (see below)
subjects amounting to fifteen "points. " A point represents a course
of five periods a week for one year in the secondary school.
The candidate must offer: counting in points
Chemistry 1
Drawing 1
Elementary French
or
Elementary German
Engl ish 3
Mathematics 4
Physics r
and three points from the following, subject to the restriction that to
offer an advanced subject will involve offering either at the same time
or earlier the corresponding elementary subject :
Elementary German )
or > see above 2 points
Elementary French J '
Elementary Spanish 2
Elementary Latin 2
Intermediate French
Intermediate German
Ancient History
Modern and Mediaeval History.
American History
English History
point
ADMISSION TO ADVANCED STANDING 225
Botany 1 point
Physiography 1
Zoology 1 "
Shop work 1 "
Advanced Physics 1 "
All candidates for degrees of Engineer of Mines, Metallurgical and
Chemical Engineer or Chemist, are recommended to offer Elementary
and Intermediate German.
Admission to Advanced Standing
Candidates for admission from other universities or colleges, and
those desiring to be admitted to advanced standing on examination,
should make application as early as possible in writing to the Chair-
man of the Committee on Admission of the Schools of Mines, En-
gineering and Chemistry.
The application should be accompanied by:
1. A catalogue of the institution for work in which credit is de-
sired. The courses which the candidate has completed must be dis-
tinctly marked in this catalogue.
2. Properly certified official statements of his standing in the sub-
jects which he offers.
3. Letters or other evidence vouching for his character and honor-
able dismissal from the institution from which he comes.
Each candidate for a degree seeking admission to advanced standing
must show that he has attained proficiency in the equivalents of:
1. The requirements for admission to the first-year class.
2. All the prescribed studies already pursued by the class to which
he seeks admission.
A candidate may be admitted notwithstanding deficiencies in some
of these studies, but no candidate will be recommended for a profes-
sional degree until he shall have completed all the studies required
for that degree.
No applicant will be allowed to enter the fourth-year class as a
candidate for a degree after October 15 in any year.
The Committee on Admission will notify the candidate by mail at
the address' given in his letter what courses, of those offered, are
accepted as equivalent to courses at Columbia University. The
Committee gives credit for complete courses only. In cases where
the work previously done by the candidate has not been accepted
by the Committee, the candidate may present himself for examination
during the week immediately preceding the opening of the University,
in 1908, September 14-19, at the times and places at which the regular
1 When the candidate is at a considerable distance from the University, his applica-
tion should be made as early as possible in order that he may receive the reply in
time to present himself at the University on September 14, 1908.
226 SCHOOLS OF MINES, ENGINEERING, CHEMISTRY
fall examinations are held. When no examination is scheduled for the
course at this time, the candidate may present himself at the office of
the Dean, who will arrange for the necessary examination. The
schedule of fall examinations is to be obtained from the Registrar. A
fee of $5 is charged for these examinations, to all applicants who do
not take them at the regular time.
It is suggested that candidates deficient in one or more entrance
subjects in June, or who desire to make up first and second year sub-
jects, arrange to take courses in them in the Summer Session of
Columbia University, beginning on July 7, 1908, the Announcement,
a copy of which will be sent upon application to the Secretary of the
University.
Admission to Special Courses
Graduates of the Schools of Mines, Engineering and Chemistry,
and of other institutions of equal grade may pursue any subjects
taught in the schools for which they are properly qualified.
Persons of mature age who are not graduates, but who show special
qualifications, are sometimes permitted to pursue special courses, but
this permission is not given to others. For the general regulations
as to non-matriculated students, see corresponding section on page 174.
Registration and Fees
(See page 26, et seq.)
Fellowships and Scholarships
(See page 408)
Rules Governing Students
1. A student cannot be a candidate for more than one professional
degree at the same time.
2. A candidate for a degree must comply with all requirements in
force at the time said degree is conferred.
3. A student will be permitted to substitute one subject for another
provided he obtains the consent of the Dean, the heads of departments
concerned, and the head of the department giving the technical in-
struction leading to the degree.
4. A student absent from more than one-tenth of the required
exercises will be debarred from examination in that subject. Excep-
tions may be made by the instructor for reasons of weight when
the absences do not exceed one-fourth the total number of
exercises.
5. After examinations have been held, officers shall send to the
Registrar a list of all students who have attended their courses, indicat-
ing proficiency by numbers on a scale of 10, a mark below 6 signifying
RULES GOVERNING STUDENTS 227
a failure to pass. Students' records will be sent to them by the
Registrar at the close of each year.
6. A student who has failed in any subject shall not be permitted
to take advanced studies for which such failure indicates a lack of
necessary preparation.
7. Regular examinations may be held at the end of the 1st and 2d
term or both, or at the completion of any course.
S. Special examinations for students debarred or deficient at
regular examinations shall be held during the two weeks in September
preceding the opening of the next following academic year; and for
members of the fourth class, in subjects belonging to that year only
during the first week in May. In all special examinations, a mark of
7 is required to pass.
9. The fee for special examination is $5.00, which must be paid
before admission to examinations. If a student have special examina-
tions in several subjects (during the same examination period), only
a single fee of $5 shall be paid.
10. A student failing to pass in any subject at the regular examina-
tions must present himself for special examination as provided under 8.
Failing to pass the second examination, he must repeat the subject
with the next class. Failing a third time to pass a satisfactory
examination he shall be dropped from the roll of the School.
11. Absence from any regular or special examination provided for
in Rules 7 and 8 shall count as a failure unless excused by the Dean
for reasons of weight.
12. A student shall be enrolled in the class in which the majority
of his hours are taken; provided, however, that no student shall be
advanced from the first to the second class who has entrance conditions
aggregating 2 points; no student shall be advanced to the third class
who has any entrance conditions or any deficiencies of the first year;
no student shall be advanced to the fourth class who has any deficiency.
13. Any student who shall have passed a satisfactory examination
in Columbia College in any subject forming a part of one of the pro-
fessional courses in the Schools of Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry
will not be required to pursue that subject a second time.
14. During vacations following the close of each year, memoirs on
assigned subjects must be prepared by students in the course of
Metallurgy, Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical
Engineering, Chemical Engineering, and Chemistry (see Departmental
Statements, pages 41-153). The time specified for the completion
and handing in of memoirs is the first Monday in November.
A student failing to hand in his memoir, drawings or other sum-
mer work shall be considered to have failed; to have his work re-
ceived later, he will be obliged to pay a fee of $5.00, as for a special
examination.
228 SCHOOLS OF MINES, ENGINEERING, CHEMISTRY
15. By permission of the Dean, and concurrence of the heads of
departments concerned, a student may attend subjects not required
for his degree, provided such attendance does not interfere with his
regular work. He must fulfil all the requirements exacted from
regular students in such course.
Equipment and Collections
Detailed information as to the laboratories, museums, collections,
libraries, and other facilities for study and research will be found in
the departmental statements as follows:
Chemistry, page 57.
Civil and Sanitary Engineering, page 62.
Electrical Engineering, page 80.
Geology, page 87.
Mechanical Engineering, page 109.
Metallurgy, page in.
Mineralogy, page 113.
Mining, page 114.
Physics, page 136.
Chemical and Assay Apparatus
(See page 61)
OUTLINE OF PROFESSIONAL COURSES OF STUDY
(For details as to each course of study see the Departmental State-
ments, pages 41-153 of this volume.)
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION
229
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REGISTER OF STUDENTS
Schools of Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry
FOURTH YEAR— CLASS OF 1908
Mining'Engineering
Bates, William Stephen, A.B. 1904 New York City
Davis, Henry Farmer St. Louis, Mo.
Dier, Alfred Austin Bozeman. Mont.
Doty, Oliver Keese New York City
Downs, Fletcher Gardner, A.B. 1906 Jersey City, N. J.
Hartog, Victor, E.M. 1901; B.S. 1903; So. Africa Sch. of Mines,
Beaconsfield, South Africa
Hoster, Manfred Theodore East Rutherford, N. J.
Hubbell, Allan Hildreth, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Hurley, Marcus Latimer New York C ity
Jones, Lewis Meredith Cleveland, Ohio
Kirtley, Luther Lycurgus, B.S. Univ. Chicago, 1903 Salt Lake City, Utah
Leaning, Eugene Hooker, A.B. Williams, 1905 New York City
Lewyn, Oswald Mark New York City
Lloyd, Karl Ernest, A.B. Oberlin 1905 Elyria, Ohio
McCartney, Elmer Barber Oakes, North Dakota
MacDonald, William Townley Denver, Colo.
[16]
Civil Engineering
Armstrong, Addison Cooke New York City
Babcock, Henry Grinnell Fanwood, N. J.
Bode, Grover Hartmann New York City
Forbes, Francis Bonner, A.B. 1904 New York City
Fraher, Thomas Augustine New York City
Gray, Clifford, E.E. 1902, A.M. 1903 New York City
Hall, Charles Lincoln New York City
Kraus, Arthur New York City
Lamke, Daniel Henry New York City
Marshal, William Robert New York City
Menke, William New York City
Menocal, Jose G., A.B. Havana Inst. 1903 Havana, Cuba
Mishkin, Victor New York City
Peshkin, Harry Charles New York City
Rothberg, Jacob Benjamin New York City
Smith, Marco Carmelich, Jr New York City
Thomas, Harold Allen, A.B. 1906 New York City
Wilson, William New York City
Young, John Joseph New York City
[19]
Electrical Engineering
Adams, Hanford Curtis, A.B. Wesleyan 1905 New York City
Bowes, William Rauchfuss New York City
236
THIRD YEAR CLASS 237
Carbone, Mario Gerolamo, Mech.E. 1907 New York City
Crbcblius, Frederick "William New York City
Hehrb. Frederick William ' New York City
Holslag, Claude Joseph Peekskill, N. Y.
Jones, Edward Crosby New York City
Luscomb, Harris Traill New York City
MacCutcheon, Aleck Morton Yorktown, N. Y.
Reizenstein, Chester Leonard New York City
Serhey, Benjamin Pocantico Hills, N. Y.
Simpson, William J. P New York City
Williamson, George East Orange, N. J.
Wilson, James Elijah, Ph.B Wesleyan, 1904 Middletown, Conn.
Woticky. Charles New York City
[is]
Mechanical Engineering
Andrei, Camillo Perugia, Italy
Byrne, Frederick John New York City
Cook, William Pierson, Jr New York City
Crawley, George Edwin New York City
Felter, Rutherford Stitt Bogota, N. J.
Hoyns, George Wayland New York City
Stix, Lawrence Cullman New York City
Swartwout, Everett Wiles Scarsdale, N. Y.
[S]
Metallurgy
Lage, Frederico Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
[1]
Chemistry
Amend, Carl G New York City
Fiedler, Albert New York City
Hudson, Hans Kierstede New York City
Kendall, Edward Calvin So. Norwalk, Conn
[4]
FOURTH YEAR— CLASS OF 1908
Mining Engineering 16
Civil " I9
Electrical " 15
Mechanical " 8
Metallurgy 1
Chemistry 4
Total 63
THIRD YEAR— CLASS OF 1909
Mining Engineering
Baldwin, ntRBEM Van Vlierden, B.S.£Princeton, 190s Nyack, N. Y.
Battle, Joel Allan, Jr Evanston, 111.
Blow, George Allmand Ware Neck, Va.
Chrystie, James Nicholson New York City
Cohn, Charles Joseph, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1903 New York City
Cutler, Willard Walker, Jr., B.S. Princeton 1906 Morristown, N. J.
Danehy, George Welch New York City
Earle, Theodore Elizabeth, N. J.
Estee, Rush Gillan Montpelier, Vt.
238 SCHOOLS OF MINES, ENGINEERING, CHEMISTRY
Gaebelein, Paul Whitefield Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Gould, Kingdon Lakewood, N. J.
Graham, Horace Reynolds New York City
Grant, Lester Eames A.B. Yale, 1906 Denver, Colo.
Hall, Harry Elias Virginia City, Mont.
Heidenreich, Walter Lee New York City
Helmrich, George Leston New Rochelle, N. Y.
Holderer, George Berkeley Denver, Colo
Hume, Harry G Basin, Mont
Huntzicker, Francis Jacob Neillsville, Wis.
Jessup, Douglas Webster Salt Lake City, Utah
Kitson, Howard Waldo New York City
Kohlberg, Herbert S., B.S. 1907 El Paso, Texas
Kozminsky, Leslie Montefiore Melbourne, Australia
Locke, Preston Erie New York City
Lund, Francis Napier Bronxville, N. Y.
May, Ernest Rudolph Lead, South Dakota
Miller, Donald Gazlay New York City
Moore, Francis William, A.B. Yale, 1907 Redlands, Cal.
Overman, Benton New York City
Perry, Robert Matson, A.B. 1906 Denver, Colo.
Roberts, Percy Llewellyn, A.B. Middlebury, 1905 New York City
Roddewig, George Washington, Mech.E., Cornell, 1906 Davenport, la.
Scott, Thomas Kline New York City
Stockly, Harold Augustus, A.B. Univ. Michigan, 1905 Hancock, Mich.
Thompson, Malcolm Macfarlan Morsemere, N. J.
Tough, Frederick Bevan Detroit, Mich.
West, Henry James, A.B. 1902 Garnersville, N. Y.
Civil Engineering
Ascher, Benjamin, B.S. C. C N. Y. 1907 New York City
Bernfeld, Lupescu Morris New York City
Carpenter, William Morgan, A.B. 1907 New York City
Eckmann, Julius, B.S., C. C. N. Y. 1907 New York City
Ferguson, Wilbur Earle New York City
Guiteras, Harold Gener Yonkers, N. Y.
Hoag, John Albert New York City
Howe, Charles Henry New York City
Krell, Isadore New York City
Kroger, Henry Andrew New York City
Lindgren, Oscar Hjalmar Orebro, Sweden
Lombard, J. Oswald Cienfuegos, Cuba
Mott, Kenneth Peekskill, N. Y.
Muriel, Jose Potosi, Mexico
Nathan, Samuel New York City
Perry, Arthur Cecil Fox Delhi, N. Y.
Rothschild, Montefiore New York City
Santelices, Daniel Santiago, Chile
von Schrenk, Trifon New York City
Slade, Harold Edmund New York City
Spalding, Lester Holt New Rochelle, N. Y.
Steinman, David Bernard, B.S., C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Strehan, George Earnest, B.S., C. C. N. Y. 1904 West Hoboken, N. J.
Van Keuren, Henry Phillip Howell, Mich.
Vulte, Gilbert Palmer New Rochelle, N. Y.
Williamson, Douglas B New York City
[26]
HIRDD YEAR CLASS 239
Electrical Engineering
Bergmann, Rudolph Charles New York City
Blackwood, William Cutler New York City
Bliss, Ernest Fred New York City
Cerussi, Biagio Peter New York City
Cohn, Hugo New York City
Deutsch, Harry Armin New York City
Fondiller, William, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1903 Westwood, N. J.
Ford, William Andrews White Plains, N. Y.
Hutchinson, George Ellis New York City
Kennedy, Freeman W Bayonne, N. J.
Klein, John Edward, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Krivulin, Herman Arnold, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Loomie, Leo Stephen New York City
MacCutcheon, Paul J., Pd.B., N. Y. State Normal 1902 Yorktown, N. Y.
Mapes, Milton Crawford White Plains, N. Y.
Mason, Frank Louis New York City
Miltenberger, Alexander Lassen St. Louis, Mo.
Rockwood, John Paret Montclair, N. J.
Struthers, Herbert Harlow New York City
Tupper, Arthur Gilbert East Orange, N. J.
White, Major Lee New York City
[20]
Mechanical Engineering
Bonner, Richard Oliver Rockville Centre, N. Y.
Borchardt, Albert Hugo New York City
Broph y, Paul Fitz Gerald New York City
Haigh, Clifford Shepard New York City
Hayes, Frank Anderson, A.B. Yale 1907 Buffalo, N. Y.
Henes, Harry William New York City
jahn, Gustave Adolph New York City
Knapp, Harold Owen New York City
Knobloch, Edward Englewood, N. J.
Marcus, Charles, A.B. 1906 New York City
Miltenberger, William St. Louis, Mo.
Remington, Henry Waterman, Jr New York City
Rice, Myron Wesley Worcester, Mass.
Schoonmaker, Herbert Sage New York City
Schwarz, Justin Ormiston New York City
Sloane, Charles O'Conor, A.B. 1906 South Orange, N>J.
Starbuck, William Lent New York City
Ulmann, U. August, Jr Yonkers, N. Y.
Van Beuren, Walter B Hoboken, N. J.
Vehslage, Harold Edwin, A.B. 1907 New York City
Youmans, George Leland East Orange, N. J.
[aij
Chemical Engineering
Barnitt, Jesse Bryte Phillipsburg, N. J.
Ezekiel, Bertram Greenville, Ala.
Kudlich, Herman Frederick, Jr New York City
Lissauer, Adolph Wiener New York City
McCulloch, Paul Leavenworth Orange, N. J.
Schramm, Edward, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
[6]
Metallurgy
Comstock, George Frederick, A.B. 1907 New York City
Daniels, Clarence White Worcester, Mass.
240 SCHOOLS OF MIXES, ENGINEERING, CHEMISTRY
Koken, William Theodore St. Louis, Mo.
Walter, Herbert Winfred, B.S. Washington State College, 1905. .Pullman, Wash.
[4]
Chemistry
Alexander, Elliot Ritchie New York City
Crew, Charles Paterson, N. J
Gettler, Alexander Oscar, B. S. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Hochstader, Irving New York City
Schwarz, Robert New York City
Stagg, Howard J. Jr New York City
Whipple, Dorris William, Ph.G. N. Y. Coll. of Pharmacy New York City
Williams, Richard Grant New York City
Winslow, William Sprague * New York City
[8]
THIRD YEAR— CLASS of 1909
Mining Engineering 40
Civil " 26
Electrical " 20
Mechanical " 21
Chemical " 6
Metallurgy 4
Chemistry 8
Total 125
SECOND YEAR— CLASS of 19 10
Mining Engineering
Annan, Robert London, England
Bamber, William Roger New York City
Bliss, Norman Eugene, A.B. Bucknell 1906 Washington, D. C.
Brown, Clinton Bleecker New York City
Brown, Lowell Huntington, Litt.B. Princeton, 1907 East Orange, N. J.
Browne, Kenneth C New York City
Carr, Homer Lyman, A.B. Oberlin, 1907 Lakewood, Ohio
Cooper, John Raymond New York City
Counselman, Theodore Benton New York City
Daniel, George William .• New York City
Farr, Thomas Henry Powers, Jr West Orange, N. J.
Farrington, Thayer Boswell St. Paul, Minn.
Feust, Sidney New York City
Fuld, Horace Alfonse New York City
Gardner, Leslie Breckenridge Waco, Texas
Gelder, Royal William New York City
Glorney, Ernest Edward Dublin, Ireland
Greenough, Warren Earl Missoula, Mont.
Hanhausen, Frederick F New York City
Hanke, Adolph Gustav Cincinnati, Ohio
Hayes -Davis, Jefferson, B.S. Princeton, 1907 Colorado Springs, Colo.
Hayes, Francis Henry, Jr New York City
Hendrick, Trowbridge Wesley Santa Monica, Cal.
de Hierapolis, George Sahb, Jr New York City
Hirsh, Ralph Tuska New York City
Hodgkinson, Harold Heroe Cleveland, Ohio
Hover, David Llewellyn Curtwright Washington, D. C.
Landon, Stephen Lesher, A.B. Yale, 1907 New York City
Lee, Montrose Lucius Omaha, Neb.
Leslie, Eugene Hamilton, A.B. Princeton, 1906 Columbus, Ohio
SECOND YEAR CLASS 241
Lineberger, John Selvyn Austin, Texas
McCann, Edgar Owen, A. B., 1903, A.M. 1905, St. Ignatius College . .San Francisco, Cal.
McChrystal, Marcus Arthur New York City
McConnell, Robert Earll Durango, Colo
McCrorken, Eugene Paul New York City
McGovern, Rudolph Aloysius New York City
McLochlin, George Graham New York City
McPearce, Clyde Duluth, Minn.
Maller, John New York City
Marsh, Austin Gerry Pueblo, Colo.
Menefee, Arthur Burley, B.S. Princeton, 1907 Louisville, Ky.
Montgomery, William Bruce, B.S., Virginia Military Inst., 1900. . . .Lynchburg, Va.
Mucklow, Wilford Barber New York City
Mulholland, Vincent I., A.B. C. C. N. Y. 190a New York City
Navarro, John Ralph Key West, Fla.
Obler, David Mortimer, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1907 New York City
O'Neale, Malcolm Lindsay New York City
Owen, William Roland, Jr Denver, Colo.
Peyton, Gilbert Small, Jr Philadelphia, Pa.
Phelan, Robert Early Washington, D C.
Ross, George Hilliard, A.B. Cornell, 1906 Edgewater, N. J.
Rupp, Frederick Louis New Rochelle, N. Y.
Rypinski, Jacob Emanuel New York City
von Saltza, Philip New York City
Saunders, Frank Harold Gloversville, N .Y.
Schneider, Gustav Billing New York City
Schnepp, Charles Frederick New York City
Shaiduroff, Nicolas. (Equiv. Mech. E. 1906) Tech. School. .Nishny Novgorod, Russia
Smith, Alexander Herbert Glasgow, Scotland
Stillman, Albert Leeds, A.B. Rutgers 1905 Hoboken, N. J.
Syverson, Theodore Sigwald Cooperstown, N. Dakota
Tallant, John Drury San Francisco, Cal.
Thomas, William Leonard, A.B. Princeton 1907 New York City
Tonking, William M Dover, N. J.
Walters, Ray Epperson, A.B. Univ. Montana 1905 Missoula, Mont.
Wardlaw, Francis Andrew, Jr Schroon Lake, N. Y.
Wilson, Trevett Abbot New York City
Zimber, Frank E West Hoboken, N. J.
[68]
Civil Engineering
Arkush, J. Ellis New York City
Babcock, Theodore Stoddard Pelham Manor, N. Y.
Beggs, George Erle, A.B. Northwestern 1905 Ashland, 111.
Davis, Irving James New York City
Dorn, George H., Jr New York City
Dougherty, Edward A New York City
Dreyfuss, Robert New York City
Duenas, Hector, A.B. National Inst., Chile Ecuador, S. A.
Estrada, Sebastian Cardenas, Cuba
Fossas, Edward Joseph San Juan, Puerto Rico
Goldfarb, Henry New York City
Goldstein, Morris Monroe New York City
Goldstein, Samuel New York City
Goodwin, Elmer Clark New York City
Hanigan, Harry, A.B. Georgetown 1906 New York City
Jones, William Benedict New York City
Laurent, Howard Paul New York City
242 SCHOOLS OF MINES, ENGINEERING, CHEMISTRY
Loewy, Alexander A New York City
Malmros, Nils Lorentz Alpred Yonkers, N. Y.
Marder, Joel David New York City
Marwick, Robert Hugh, A.B. 1906 Petrolia, Ontario, Canada
Mayer, Charles, A.B. 1907 New York City
Merlis, Isaac, B.S., C. C. N. Y. 1907 New York City
Nors worthy, Leonard D New York City
Robert, Charles Simpson Plainfield, N. J.
Robinson, Thomas Argo St. Louis, Mo.
Rodenburg, John Tietjen New York City
Schumacher, Karl J Lonsdale, R. I.
Snook, Curtis Pendleton Montclair, N. J.
Snook, Thomas Edward, Jr New York City
Soule, Ernest Wilbur New York City
Spencer, Charles Burr New York City
Voskamp, John Aloysius New York City
Weinstein, Joseph New York City
Wickenden, Alfred Ahier Bethel, Conn.
Williams, Harold New Bedford, Mass.
Williams, Thomas William New Bedford, M ss.
Electrical Engineering
Alexander, William Austin New York City
Arnstein, Watler L New York City
Bangs, George Harold New York City
Benedict, Victor New York City
Black, Henry Scudder New Rochelle, N. Y.
Born, Sidney New York City
Brazil, Augusto de Moura Rio de Janerio, Brazil
Broe, Arthur Lowrey New York City
Clemson, William Edwin Newark, N. J.
Cordovez, Carlos Quito, Ecuador
Dellenbaugh, Frederick Samuel, Jr New York City
Deschere, Harvey New York City
Foeller, Harold C. E New York City
Fonts, Humberto Havana, Cuba
Foote, Hastings New York City
Griffen, Ellwood Burdsall New York City
Guthorn, Seymour ' New York City
Hamann, Adolph Martin Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Hammond, Harold Orvis New York City
Hinkel, Edward Joseph New York City
Jordan, Carl Philip Great Falls, Mont.
Keator, Randall Moss New York City
McGuiness, Francis Vincent New York City
McKanna, Edwin Alexander Oklahoma City, Okla.
Muller, Frederick New York City
Osborn, Stanley Royal New York City
Powell, Alvin Leslie Rockville Centre, N. Y.
Restrepo, Luciano Medellin, Colombia, S. A.
Robinson, Karl Davis New York City
Ryan, John Joseph New York City
Spitzer, Benjamin New York City
Sprung, Abraham New York City
Stafford, Raymond Wright New York City
Tobias, David Francis New York City
Wahlig, Rudolph Charles New York City
. SECOND YEAR CLASS 243
Waitt, Weymer H New York City
Webster, Leslie Standard New York City
Weed, deWitt Vanderbilt, Jr New York City
White, Ralph Leb New York City
[40]
Mechanical Engineering
Blumenfeld, Ralph New York City
Bowes, Charles Munton New York City
Bowles, Philip E., Jr Oakland, Cal.
Davis, Frank Rutledge New York City
Egbert, Harry Drew, A.B. 1907 New York City
Fredericks, Walter New York City
Herzog, David Sulzberger New York City
Hoyt, Hazen Luertus, Jr New York City
Ives, Francis Lasak New York City
Lord, Jay Willard New York City
Lukens, Edward French New York City
von Malmborg, Carl Adolf Stockholm, Sweden
Matz, Louis New York City
di Moise, Gino Bettino New York City
Morrill, Otis Chamberlain, A.B. Williams 1907 New York City
Morrow, Robert Lee New York City
von Muffling, Ernest Adrian New York City
O 'Brian, Lewis Etienne New Rochelle, N. Y.
Oakley, Walter Weckerle New York City
Peck, John Arza, Jr Pelham, N. Y.
Saxe, John Godfrey New York City
Semel, Arthur Lieber New York City
Smith, Alfred John Central Islip, N. Y.
Ulmann, Edg..r Ernest Yonkers, N. Y.
Wheeler, William Henry New York City
Wiehle, Alvin Louis Virgil Wiehle, Va-
Wood, Thomas Carlyle Topeka, Kansas
Zach, Louis Morris New York City
[28]
Chemical Engineering
Baer, Samuel New York City
Bishoff, Sylvan New York City
Bole, George Addison, B.S. Geneva 1906 Beaver Falls, N. Y.
Daniels. Monroe Heller New York City
Grieve, James Perth Amboy, N. J.
Herrick, Horace Terhune, A.B. Princeton 1907 New York City
Heumann, Emil Michael New York City
Lipstate, Wadel Abram Tyler, Texas
Malcomson, Malcolm David Orange, N. J.
Murphy, Robert Kenneth Rochester, N. Y.
Nordlinger, Lester New York City
Raphael, Abraham Lincoln New York City
[12]
Metallurgy
Guiterman, Kenneth S Denver, Colo.
Halcomb, Charles Herbert, Jr., A.B. Yale 1907 Cazenovia, N. Y.
Mapes, Clarence Daniel White Plains, N. Y.
[3]
244 SCHOOLS OF MINES, ENGINEERING, CHEMISTRY
Chemistry
Hallock, Frederick Barton New York City
Steinschneider, William New York City
Thompson, Ernest Charles New York City
[3]
SECOND YEAR— CLASS OF 19 10
Mining Engineering 68
Civil 37
Electrical " 40
Mechanical " 28
Chemical " 12
Metallurgy 3
Chemistry 3
Total 191
FIRST YEAR— CLASS OF 191 1
Agramonte, Pedro Henry New York City
Allen. Frederick Murdock Peekskill, N. Y.
Ananieff, Vladimir Ravlovitch Moscow, Russia
Ayer, Francis Ashton Weehawken, N. J.
Ayers, William Chandler Barre, Vt.
Bach, Henry Michael New York City
Bains, Thomas Mellor, Jr Philadelphia, Penn.
Baker, James Alpheno, Jr New York City
Bates, Stanley Edwards Plainfield, N. J.
Baumeister, Paul Arnold New York City
Benson, Claus Doscher New York City
Bettelheim, Edwin Sumner New York City
Betts, Charles Elwood Westport, Conn.
Block, Max Jacob New York City
Blumenthal, Alexander Samuel New York City
Bode, Louis Herman New York City
Bonsfield, Harold W New York City
Braender, Walter Philip White Plains, N. Y.
Briggs, Robert Wesley New York City
Brown, Edward Stanley Rutherford, N. J.
Buchtenkirch, William Ernst New York City
Burgess, E. Payne Jewett New York City
Caldwell, John Henderson, Jr Bristol, Tenn.
Capablanca, Jose Raul New York City
Carter, Kenneth Freeland Tarrytown, N. Y.
Caswell, Edward Thomas Elmhurst, N. Y.
Cherry, William Alexander, Jr White Plains. N. Y.
Clark, Sidney Milton New York City
Cleveland, Horace Hayward New York City
Clougden, John, Jr New York City
Cobden, Richard, Jr Larchmont Manor, N. Y.
Colas, Nicolas New York City
Cole, Arthur B Montclair, N. J.
Cole, Howard Thomas Brewster, N. Y.
Cook, Edgar Hawley Albany, N. Y.
Corsa, Howard Pinckney New York City
Degavre, Martin L Newark, N. J.
Deiser, Norman Arthur New York City
FIRST YEAR CLASS 245
Demorest, William Jennings New York City
Deschere, Paul Richard New York City
Diaz, Marino Havana, Cuba
Donaldson, Kenneth Hume New York City
Donohoe, Denis, III New York City
Donovan, James New York City
Dorland, Howard Ernst New York City
Durant, Donald New York City
Edgar, George Coleman New York City
Englander, Harry New York City
Entelmann, John New York City
Ercolano, Melchiori Italy
Faas, Charles Thorne Great Neck, L. I.
Ferguson, James Liverpool, Eng.
Finkelstein Martin New York City
Fogel, William Percy, Jr Rutherford, N. J.
Ford, Andrew J South Amboy, N. J.
Friedman, Morris New York City
Furmansky, Joseph Jacob Rondout, N. Y .
Gately, William Aloysius New York City
Giroux, Leon Maxwell New York City
Goldstone, Lawrence Preston, Jr New York City
Gref, William Hodgins Nantucket, Mass.
Guiteras, Julian George Yonkers, N. Y.
Guiteras, Joseph Ramon Yonkers, N. Y.
Gutierrez db Celis Santiago Havana, Cuba.
Hale, John Clarence White Plains, N. Y.
Hall, Albert E New York City
Haner, Carl, Jr New York City
Harder, Ernest Henry Newark, N. J.
Harper, Joseph Henry, Jr Lawrence, L. I.
Hazzard, Lynne F Bisbee, Arizona
Herbert, Wyman Drummond New York City
Herter, Albert Henry New York City
Hertzog, Howard Sinton Shamokin, Penn.
Hicks, Charles Selden Bayside, L. I
Hill, Leonard Oscar New York City
Hill, Walter Charles Hagaman, N. Y.
Hirsch, Charles Marcel New York City
Hochberger, Julius New York City
Hoffman, James Milton New York City
Holm an, Arthur John New York City
Horowitz, Benjamin New York City
Hsu, Sinfoo, C. C Hu-nan, China
Hubbard, Edgar W New York City
Hvass, Charles Thomas, Jr New York City
Isem an, Percy Reginald New York City
Jackson, Guert Gansevoort, Jr Metuchen, N. J.
Jacques, William Singer East Orange, N. J.
Jansen, Thomas Carl New York City
Jaros, Alfred Leopold, Jr New York City
Jeanneret, Leon E Rutherford, N. J.
Jen kins, Harold Brewster New York City
de Jongh, Arthur Francis New York City
Kandel, Charles New York City
Kennedy, Walter Woodward New York City
King, Thomas Edward Sound Beach, Conn.
246 SCHOOLS OF MINES, ENGINEERING, CHEMISTRY
Kinsman, Richard Ellard New York City
Kirschberg, Matthias New York City
Kislowskv, Andrew Duritri Moscow, Russia
Koller, Max Alexander New York City
Kuzmier, George Peter New York City
Lacy, Frederick Thurlow New York City
Laroque, Fulgence Bordeaux, France
Lasch, John Strauss New York City
Leach, Albert Allyn, Jr New York City
Leiser, Ferdinand, Jr New York City
Leslie, Elwyn Erving New York City
Levy, Nathan New York City
Liebowitz, Benjamin New York City
Lindemann, Carl, Jr Hoboken, N. J.
Litman, Isaac New York City
Livingston, William Smith, Jr New York City
Lommel, George Lawrence New York City
Lovejoy, John Meston New Rochelle, N. Y
Lowe, Donald Vaughn Englewood, N. J.
McConnell, Leroy Wilson Dallas, Texas
McIntyre, Kenneth Arnon Mt. Vernon, N. Y-
McKeown, Samuel Anderson New York City
Mancusi-Ungaro, Manfredi Newark, N. J.
Martin, Henry Peter Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Marum, Myron Gilbert Paterson, N. J.
Mendelowitz, Milton Herbert New York City
Mendelsohn, Albert New York City
Meyer, Emil Gustave New York City
Miller, Frederick New York City
Miller, Walter Reginald West Park, N. Y.
Mi yata, Bunichi Sagami, Japan
Morriss, Arthur Dudley New York City
Mott, F. Douglas Peekskill, N. Y.
Murray, Joseph Norris New York City
Nathan, Cyril James New York City
Naylor, Henry Rodley New York City
Newton, Edmund Arkville, N. Y.
Novomesky, Emil New York City
Ockert, Frederick William New York City
Palmer, William Frederick New York City
Parker, Arthur Rowley New York City
Paterson, Archie Hartley Wingham, Ontario
Patterson, Richard Cunningham, Jr Kansas City, Mo.
Peters, George Laurence New York City
Peters, William Frederick, Jr New York City
Philippoff, Boris D Moscow, Rus.
Philson, James De Long New York City
Pino, Ernesto Havana, Cuba
Powers, Lansing Woodruff New York City
Prout, William Samuel Topeka, Kan.
Ransom, Rastus S., Jr New York City
Renshaw, Paul Noroton, Conn-
Riley, Wells Littlefield New York City
Ripperger, Walter Ludwig New York City
Rodriguez, Eduardo Costa Rica, C. A-
Rothchild, David New York City
Rothwell, Vincent Harold New York City
FIRST YEAR CLASS 247
Samukly, Nathan New York City
Schapiro, Morris S Union Hill, N. J.
Schlichting, Louis, Jr New York City
Schlottm an, Gustave New York City
Simon. Henry New York City
Simpson, Paul Newburyport, Mass.
Sloanb, Charles Edward Washington, D. C.
Steioman, Benjamin Morris New York City
Stewart, William Elmer, Jr Astora, L. I.
Stoll, Morris New York City
Strippel, Albert Edwin New York City
Szanto, Sandor Hungary
Taylor, Stevenson Peirce New York City
Thompson, Lester Seymour New York City
Thompson, William Creevy Morristown, N. J.
Tschudy, Edward Albert New York City
Tupper, Wilbur Drake East Orange, N. J.
Valdes, Alfonso Phillip New York City
Valentine, Claude Harry New York City
Vogel, Oscar M Great Falls, Mont.
Volker, Henry Joseph Ossining, N. Y.
Wall, William Buchman New York City
Wallis, Joseph Edmund, Jr Beaumont, Tex.
Weaver, Gilbert Morgan New York City
Webster, James McB New York City
Weiss, Benjamin New York City
Welch, Ellis William Rutherford, N. J.
White, Thomas Kenneth New York City
Williams, Granville Mercer New York City
Wise, Sidney Leo New York City
Wright, William Ryer New York City
Zimmermann, Frederick Louis New York City
Zogbaum, Ferdinand New York City
[186]
Non-Matriculated Students
Barlow, Alford E Red Bank, N. J.
Bergman, Hippolyte New York City
Birch, George Howard New York City
Brazil, Luiz de Moura Rio de Janero, Brazil
Cahoone, William M Red Bluff, Cal.
Chamberlin, Egbert C New York City
Dodge, W. Earl New York City
Frese, Walter Adolph New York City
Gascoyne. William John, Jr Baltimore, Md.
Gray, Thomas T Elizabeth, N. J.
Hoykendorf, K New York City
Huyler, Coulter D New York City
Kuser, Peter D New York City
Latham, Everett Bodine New York City
Ludlow, Henry H New York City
Morris, David A Chicago, 111.
Piel, Henry Gottfried New York City
Riesenberg, Felix New York City
Segard, Christian Peter New York City
Shakespeare, Norman Everett Baltimore, Md.
Smith, John A New York City
248 SCHOOLS OF MINES, ENGINEERING, CHEMISTRY
Strobel, Roger Louis New York City
Taylor, Ellis Wing Los Angeles, Cal.
Non-matriculated 23
Attended Summer Session 1907, but did not enter 1907-1908.
Barbour, Robert Monmouth Beach, N. J.
Blanchard, Julian Hertford, N. C.
Boeck, Percy Albert New York City
Bosworth, William Hamlin New York City
Bridgman, Linden Wentzel New York City
French, Robert Mansfield New Rochelle, N. Y.
Gillie, George Ross New York City
Goldwater, Sidney James New York City
Grunsky, Carl Ewall, Jr New York City
Guinchard, Alejandro New York City
Hammerschlag, Henry Adolph Newark, N. J.
Hasbrouck. Bernard S. Nyack, N. Y.
Holbert, Harry Hurd New York City
Lindo, Albert New York City
Mead, Raymond Hinman New York City
Mora, Ernest Jose Easton, Pa.
Notman, Arthur New York City
Vorisek, Anton New York City
[18]
SUMMARY
Undergraduate Students
School of Mines:
Mining Engineering
Metallurgy
School of Chemistry:
Chemistry
Chemical Engineering . . .
School of Engineering:
Civil Engineering
Electrical Engineering . .
Mechanical Engineering
Second
Year
68
3
37
40
28
Third
Year
41
4
Fourth
Year
Totals
14
18
81
75
57
First Year Class 186
Non -matriculated 23
Students from Columbia College 186
Total
596
FACULTY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
ESTABLISHED 1880
Officers of the Faculty
John W. Burgess, Ph.D., LL.D. . .Dean and ex-officio Member of the
University Council
Henry Rogers Seager, Ph.D Secretary
Munroe Smith, J.U.D., LL.D Elected Delegate to the
University Council {term expires iqio).
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D., (Cantab.) Litt.D. (Oxon.),
President
John W. Burgess, Ph.D., LL.D Ruggles Professor of Political
Science and Constitutional Law
Munroe Smith, J.U.D., LL.D Professor of Roman Law and
Comparative Jurisprudence
1 Frank J. Goodnow, A.M., LL.D . . .Eaton Professor of Administrative
Law and Municipal Science
Edwin R. A. Seligman, Ph.D., LL.D McVickar Professor of
Political Economy
Herbert L. Osgood, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of History
John Bassett Moore, LL.D Hamilton Fish Professor of
International Law and Diplomacy
William A. Dunning, Ph.D., LL.D Lieber Professor of History
and Political Philosophy
Franklin H. Giddings, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Sociology
and the History of Civilization
John B. Clark, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Political Economy
James Harvey Robinson, Ph.D Professor of History
William M. Sloane, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D. . .Seth Low Professor of
His tory
Henry R. Seager, Ph.D Professor of Political Economy
Henry L. Moore, Ph.D Professor of Political Economy
William R. Shepherd, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of History
James T. Shotwell, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of History
George W. Botsford, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of History
Vladimir G. Simkhovitch, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Economic
History
1 Absent on leave
249
250 FACULTY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Edward Thomas Devine, Ph.D. . . .Schiff Professor of Social Economy
Henry Johnson, A.M Professor of History in Teachers College
Charles A. Beard, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Politics
K. G. Rudolf Leonhard, J.U.D. . .Kaiser Wilhehn Professor of Ger-
man History and Institutions
Samuel McCune Lindsay, Ph.D Professor of Social Legislation
GENERAL STATEMENT
The Faculty of Political Science has charge of the university courses
of instruction and research in political and social science, including
history, economics, public law, and comparative jurisprudence.
The School of Political Science was opened on Monday, the fourth
day of October, 1880.
It is the purpose of the School to give a complete general view of all
the subjects of public polity, both internal and external, from the
threefold point of view of history, law, and philosophy. The prime
aim is, therefore, the development of all the branches of the political
and social sciences. The secondary and practical objects are:
(a) To fit young men for the public service.
(b) To give an adequate economic and legal training to those who
intend to make journalism their profession.
(c) To supplement, by courses in public law and comparative juris-
prudence, the instruction in private municipal law offered by the
Faculty of Law.
{d) To educate teachers of history, economics, social science, public
law, and jurisprudence.
For detailed information in regard to the various courses that are
offered with these ends in view, see Announcement of the Courses in
History, Economics, and Public Law.
ADMISSION AND ATTENDANCE
Every student is required to file a list of his studies for the academic
year at the time he registers, or within one week thereafter, at the
office of the Registrar. If he subsequently wishes to make any change
in -his studies he must file written notice of his wish at the Dean's
office, and must obtain the assent of the Dean.
Admission to the School of Political Science does not imply admis-
sion to candidacy for a degree. The conditions of candidacy for the
several degrees are given on page 164. Students should also fa-
miliarize themselves with the separately printed pamphlet entitled:
Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science, which may
be had upon application to the Secretary of the University.
Women who hold a baccalaureate degree are admitted to the School
of Political Science as students in history and economics and may
become candidates for the higher degrees.
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION 251
Admission to other Courses
Any duly matriculated university student is at liberty to combine*
without any additional fee, courses of study and investigation under
this Faculty with courses offered by other Faculties of the University
and with courses offered in the College.
FEES
(See page 27)
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION
For information regarding the courses offered in 1907-08 see
statement under groups of subjects, as follows:
Economics and Social Science, page 72.
History and Political Philosophy, page 96.
Public Law and Comparative Jurisprudence, page 104.
For more detailed accounts of the courses and for the tender of
1908-09, application should be made for the Announcement of the
Courses in History, Economics, and Public Law.
Seminars
Outside of the regular instruction in the various subjects by lecture,
opportunity is furnished to the students of the School for the special
investigation of historical, legal, economic, and social questions under
the direction of the professors. This is done by means of original
papers prepared by the students. The papers are read before the
professor and the students, and are then criticised and discussed.
There will be at least one seminar in each subject. The number
of meetings and the topics to be discussed are determined each year.
Attendance at the seminar in the major subject is required of candi-
d ates for the degree of Master of Arts or Doctor of Philosophy.
Yale-Columbia Courses in Preparation for Foreign Service
A system of courses has been inaugurated by Yale University and
Columbia University, to prepare students for work in foreign countries,
either in the service of the United States Government, in business
enterprises, or as missionaries or scientific investigators.
The courses are intended to make the student familiar with the
general subjects required for successful work in foreign countries and
to enable him, by means of this knowledge, to gain quick mastery of
special problems that present themselves in diverse occupations and
regions. More special courses of instruction are intended to convey
knowledge relating to particular regions in which the student intends
to carry on his work.
The successful completion of the courses offered, which will nor-
252 FACULTY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
mally occupy three years in the case of candidates for the consular
service, and two years in the case of candidates for other foreign service
in special fields, will entitle the student, on recommendation of the joint
committee in charge of the course of studies, to an appropriate certifi-
cate signed by the Presidents of Yale University and Columbia Uni-
versity. Subject to the rules of the two cooperating institutions,
candidates for certificates are admitted to candidacy for the regular
academic degrees.
The course of study is framed primarily for graduate students, but
it is also open to specially qualified students who have not completed
the full college course. Students are expected to have completed
successfully at least two years of undergraduate work at either Yale
University or Columbia College, or to give proof of equivalent training.
Candidates for a certificate must prove their ability to read French
or German, and must have completed the regular college courses on
the general principles of economics, American history, and European
history of the nineteenth century.
The program of studies includes seven divisions: (i) Languages, (2)
Geography, (3) Ethnography, (4) History, (5) Religions, (6) Eco-
nomics, (7) Law.
For detailed information concerning these courses apply to the
Dean of the Graduate School, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., or
to the Secretary of Columbia University, New York City.
FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY
ESTABLISHED 1890
Officers of the Faculty
Edward Delavan Perry, Ph.D., LL.D. . .Dean and ex-ofjicio Member
of the University Council
George N. Olcott, Ph.D Secretary
George Rice Carpenter, A.B., D. C. L. . . .Elected Delegate to the
University Council
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D., (Cantab.) Litt.D. (Oxon.)
President
Richard James Horatio Gottheil, Ph.D. . . .Professor of Rabbinical
Literature and the Semitic Languages
Harry Thurston Peck, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D. ...Anthon Professor of
the Latin Language and Literature
William Henry Carpenter, Ph.D Villard Professor of Germanic
Philology
J. McKeen Cattell, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Psychology
Edward Delavan Perry, Ph.D., LL.D Jay Professor of Greek
Abraham Valentine Williams Jackson, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D. .Pro-
fessor of the Indo-Iranian Languages
Adolphe Cohn, LL.B., A.M Professor of the Romance Languages
and Literatures
Brander Matthews, D.C.L., Litt.D., LL.D. . . .Professor of Dramatic
Literature
Henry Alfred Todd, Ph.D Professor of Romance Philology
George Rice Carpenter, A.B., D.C.L Professor of Rhetoric and
English Composition
James Rignall Wheeler, Ph.D Professor of Greek Archeology
and Art
James Chidester Egbert, Ph.D Professor of Latin
Calvin Thomas, LL.D Gebliard Professor of the Germanic
Languages and Literatures
Carlo Leonardo Speranza, B. es L., A.M Professor of Italian
Franz Boas, Ph.D Professor of Anthropology
Franklin T. Baker, A.M Professor of the English Language and
Literature
James Earl Russell, Ph.D., LL.D. . .Barnard Professor of Education
253
254 FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY
» Frank Morton McMurry, Ph.D Professor of Elementary
Education
Paul Monroe, Ph.D Professor of the History of Education
Samuel Train Dutton, A.M Professor of School Administration
» William Peterfield Trent, LL.D., D.C.L Professor of English
Literature
Nelson Glenn McCrea, Ph.D Professor of Latin
Gonzalez Lodge, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Latin and Greek
Clarence Hoffman Young, Ph.D Professor of Greek
Livingston Farrand, A.M., M.D Professor of Anthropology
Edward Lee Thorndike, Ph.D. . . .Professor of Educational Psychology
William T. Brewster, A.M Professor of English
Charles Knapp, Ph.D Professor of Classical Philology
John Dyneley Prince, Ph.D Professor of the Semitic Languages
Frederick J. E. Woodbridge, A.M., LL.D. .Johnsonian Professor of
Philosophy
Friedrich Hirth, Ph.D Dean Lung Professor of Chinese
Felix Adler, Ph.D Professor of Social and Political Ethics
Julius Sachs, Ph.D Professor of Secondary Education
Charles A. Strong, A.B Professor of Psychology
Marshall H. Saville Loubat Professor of American Archeology
Louis A. Loiseaux, B.S Adjunct Professor of the Romance
Languages and Literatures
William Addison Hervey, A.M . . . .Adjunct Professor of the Germanic
Languages and Literatures
Rudolf Tombo, Jr., Ph.D Adjunct Professor of the Germanic
Languages and Literatures
John Angus MacVannel, Ph.D Professor of the Philosophy of
Education
Joel Elias Spingarn, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Comparative
Literature
George N. Olcott, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Latin
»George Stuart Fullerton, Ph.D., LL.D. . .Professor of Philosophy
Jefferson B. Fletcher, A.M. . . .Professor of Comparative Literature
John Dewey, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Philosophy
Robert S. Woodworth, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Psychology
Curtis Hidden Page, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of the Romance
Languages and Literatures
Ashley Horace Thorndike, Ph.D Professor of English
Arthur F. J. Remy, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Germanic
Philology
William P. Montague, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Philosophy
William W. Lawrence, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of English
George Philip Krapp, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of English
Dickinson S. Miller, Ph.D Professor of Philosophy
1 Absent "on leave.
COURSES OF STUDY AND RESEARCH 255
GENERAL STATEMENT
The Faculty of Philosophy has charge of the advanced courses of
instruction and research in philosophy, psychology, education, an-
thropology, philology, and letters. Any duly matriculated stu-
dent is at liberty to combine courses of study and investigation
under this Faculty with courses offered by the Faculties of Law, Medi-
cine, Political Science, Pure Science, and Applied Science.
Students are received either as candidates for the degrees of Master
of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy (see "Regulations for University
Degrees," page 164 et seq.), or as "non-matriculated students," to pur-
sue special or partial courses.
Students enrolled in any one of the theological seminaries mentioned
on page 32, who may be designated for the privilege by the authorities
of those institutions, and accepted by the President of Columbia
University, are admitted to the courses offered by the Faculty of
Philosophy free of all charge for tuition.
These institutions offer reciprocal privileges to students of Colum-
bia University.
COURSES OF STUDY AND RESEARCH
For the courses offered in 1907-08, see departmental statements as
follows:
Anthropology, page 45. Oriental Languages
Comparative Literature, page Semitic, page 122.
69. Indo-Iranian, page 121.
Education, page 75. Chinese, page 120.
English, page 83 Philosophy and Psychology,
Germanic Languages, page 89. page 130.
Greek (including Archaeology Romance Languages, page 143.
and Epigraphy), page 93. Science of Language, page 122.
Latin (including Epigraphy
and Roman Archaeology),
page 100.
For the courses to be offered for 1908-09, application should be
made for the Announcement of the Schools of Philosophy, Political
Science, and Pure Science, and for the divisional Announcements of
Classical Philology, Modern Languages and Literatures, Oriental Lan-
guages, Philosophy, Psychology, and Anthropology, and of Teachers
College, published in the spring of 1908.
FACULTY OF PURE SCIENCE
ESTABLISHED 1892
Officers of the Faculty
William Hallock, Ph.D Dean and ex-ofjicio Member of the
University Council
Cassius Jackson Keyser, Ph.D. . .Secretary and Elected Delegate to the
University Council (term expires 19 10)
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D. (Cantab.), Litt.D. (Oxon.),
President
J. Howard Van Amringe, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D Professor of
Mathematics
Charles F. Chandler, M.D., Ph.D. LL.D., Sc.D. .Mitchill Professor
of Chemistry
Henry S. Munroe, E.M., Ph.D., Sc.D Professor of Mining
John G. Curtis, M.D., LL.D Professor of Physiology
Alfred J. Moses. E.M., Ph.D Professor of Mineralogy
George S. Huntington, M.D., Sc.D Professor of Anatomy
Henry Fairfield Osborn, LL.D., Sc.D Da Costa Professor of
Zoology
Edmund B. Wilson, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Zoology
James F. Kemp, E.M., Sc.D Professor of Geology
William Hallock, Ph.D Professor of Physics
Francis B. Crocker, E.M., Ph.D. .Professor of Electrical Engineering
Michael I. Pupin, Ph.D., Sc.D Professor of Electro-Mechanics
T. Mitchell Prudden, M.D., LL.D Professor of Pathology
William H. Burr, C.E Professor of Civil Engineering
1 Thomas Scott Fiske, Ph.D Professor of Mathematics
Harold Jacoby, Ph.D Rutherfurd Professor of Astronomy
Frank N. Cole, Ph.D Professor of Mathematics
Frederic S. Lee, Ph.D Professor of Physiology
Bashford Dean, Ph.D Professor of Vertebrate Zoology
* Lucien Marcus Underwood, Ph.D., LL.D Torrey Professor of
Botany
Henry M. Howe, A.M., B.S., LL.D Professor of Metallurgy
1 Absent on leave. * Died November 16, 1907.
256
GENERAL STATEMENT 257
John Francis Woodhull, Ph.D Professor of Physical Science in
Teachers College
Richard Elwood Dodge, A.M Professor of Geography in Teachers
College
James Maclay, C.E., Ph.D Professor of Mathematics
Marston Taylor Bogert, A.B., Ph.B., Professor of Organic Chemistry
J. Livingston Rutgers Morgan, Ph.D Professor of Physical
Chemistry
Henry E. Crampton, Ph.D Professor of Zoology
David Eugene Smith, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Mathematics in
Teachers College
William J. Gies, M.S., Ph.D Professor of Biological Cltemistry
Amadeus W. Grabau, S.D Professor of Palaeontology
Herbert Maule Richards, Sc.D Professor of Botany
Gary N. Calkins, Ph.D Professor of Protozoology
Philip Hanson Hiss, Jr., M.D Professor of Bacteriology
Cassius J. Keyser, Ph.D Adrain Professor of Mathematics
Ernest Fox Nichols, Sc.D Professor of Experimental Physics
Lea McIlvaine Luquer, Ph.D ... .Adjunct Professor of Mineralogy
Frederick R. Bailey, A.M., M.D Adjunct Professor of Histology
and Embryology
Russell Burton-Opitz, M.D Adjunct Professor of Physiology
Thomas Hunt Morgan, Ph.D. . . .Professor of Experimental Zoology
Charles Lane Poor, Ph.D Professor of Astronomy
Henry Clapp Sherman, Ph.D Professor of Organic Analysis
Frank Leo Tufts, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Physics
Albert P. Wills, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Mechanics
Henry B. Mitchell, A.M Adjunct Professor of Mathematics
Hermon C. Bumpus, Ph.D Director of the American Museum of
Natural History
GENERAL STATEMENT
The Faculty of Pure Science has charge of the advanced courses of
instruction and research in all branches of pure science, and especially
the supervision of the candidates for the degrees of Master of Arts and
Doctor of Philosophy in pure science. Students under other Univer-
sity Faculties are also at liberty to pursue courses of study and inves-
tigation under this Faculty.
Candidates for the higher degrees taking major subjects in pure
science will be regarded as under the special jurisdiction of this Faculty.
Graduate students, candidates for the degree of Master of Arts or
Doctor of Philosophy, are subject:
1. To the general regulations of the Universitv Council. (See page
164.)
2. To the special regulations of this Faculty.
258 FACULTY OF PURE SCIENCE
Special Regulations of the Faculty of Pure Science
The degree of Doctor of Philosophy is awarded on the basis of a
thorough training in the methods of advanced work and investiga-
tion in some branch of science. The following statements are offered
for the guidance of students. In the case of students of special ability
or exceptional previous training, the Faculty may modify its usual
regulations.
The student is expected to gain a sound general knowledge of the
two minor subjects of his choice. In the major subject a much more
thorough and special knowledge is required, particular importance
being attached to training in research. Each minor subject is in-
tended to occupy approximately one fourth of the time during one
year for the degree of Master of Arts, and during one or two years,
according to the nature of the subject and the previous training of
the candidate, for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. It is expected
that the third year of study, and in certain cases both the second and
the third years, will be wholly devoted to the major subject and to in-
vestigation for the dissertation.
The approval of the subject of the essay required for the degree of
Master of Arts, or the subject of the dissertation required for the
degree of Doctor of Philosophy, as well as the essay or dissertation
itself, rests with the instructor in charge of the candidate's major
subject. It is desirable that these studies should be related, and,
when practicable, that they should be treated respectively as pre-
liminary and completed investigations. Great importance is attached
to the character of the final dissertation. While it must depend for
acceptance chiefly on the subject-matter, it should show good literary
workmanship, especially by directness and clearness of statement.
It should demonstrate the author's capacity to do original scientific
work, and to render an intelligible account thereof. It should evince
a familiarity with the literature of the subject, and with the latest
applicable methods of research. The treatment should be as con-
cise as the nature of the work permits. Every dissertation should
be preceded by a clear introductory statement setting forth the nature
and the scope of the research, and be followed by a resume" of the
results and the conclusions obtained. It should also be accompanied
by a table of contents and by a list of the authorities consulted in its
preparation.
Non-matriculated Students
Students who are not candidates for a degree may be permitted to
pursue such courses from among those offered by this Faculty as they
may be found qualified to enter upon. Each applicant must demon-
strate his ability to pursue the course or courses selected, and the
judges of his qualifications shall be the heads of the departments in
COURSES OF STUDY 259
which he proposes to study. In general these special courses are open
only to advanced students.
COURSES OF STUDY
For the courses offered for 1907-08, see departmental statements
as follows:
Anatomy, page 42. Geology, page 87.
Astronomy, page 49. Mathematics, page 106.
Bacteriology, page 50. Mechanical Engineering, page 109.
Biological Chemistry, page 5 1 . Mechanics, see Physics.
Botany, page 53. Metallurgy, page in.
Chemistry, page 57. Mineralogy, page 113.
Civil Engineering, page 62. Mining, page 114.
Electrical Engineering, page 80. Physics, page 136.
Engineering Drafting, page 83. Physiology, page 140.
Zoology, page 150.
For more detailed accounts of the courses application should be
made for the Announcement of the Schools of Political Science, Phi-
losophy, and Pure Science, and for the divisional Announcements of
Biology, of Chemistry, of Geology, Geography, and Mineralogy, of
Mathematical and Physical Science, and of the Schools of Mines,
Engineering, a>td Chemistry, published in the spring.
Particular attention is called to the pamphlet entitled Instructions
to Graduate Students.
REGISTER OF STUDENTS, 1907-8
Under the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy
and Pure Science 1
Abelow, Samuel Philip, B.S. 1905 New York City
History, Social Economy
Abels, Moses Joseph Solomon, A.M. 1906, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Social Economy, Philosophy
Abrams, Leonard David, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 New York City
History
Ackerman, Howard Chester, A.M. 1907, B.D. G. T. S. 1907 Syracuse, N. Y.
Philosophy
Adams, (Mrs.) Flora Dodson, Ph.B. Chicago 1907 Norfolk, Va.
Germanic, English
Adams, Francis Freeman, B.S. Acadia 1907 Fredericton, N. B., Canada
Chemistry, Bacteriology, Biol. Chemistry
Albright, Victor E., A.B. Ohio Wesleyan 1901, A.M. Harvard i904.Terra Alta, W. Va.
English, Comparative Literature
Alexander, Luther Herbert, A.B. Toronto 1883, A.M. 1885 New York City
Romance, History
Allen, Lucy Branch, A.B. Wellesley 1897 New York City
English
Alles, Robert Harry, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 East Orange, N J.
English, German
Allis, Mary Lincoln, B.S. 1906 Amherst, Mass.
Sociology, Economics, History
Allison, George Deacon, A.M. 1907, Ph.B. Brown 1905 New York City
Sociology, History
Alvord, Katharine Sprague, A.B. Michigan 1893 Sandusky, Ohio
History, Sociology
Amano, Seiichi, A.M. 1906, equiv. A.B. Doninsha 1892 Shizuoka City, Japan
Economics, Sociology, Political Philosophy
Anderson, Ervin Leech, A.B. West Virginia 1905 Morgantown, W. Va.
Romance, German
Anderson, Mary Perle, B.S. Mt. Holyoke 1890 East Berkshire, Vt.
Botany
Arner, George Byron Louis, A.M. 1906, B.L. German Wallace 1904. Jefferson, Ohio
Sociology
Auerbach, Eva Fanny, A.B. 1907 New York City
Philosophy , Philanthropy
Auleta, Vincent Henry, A.B. Manhattan 1907 New York City
English
Ausmus, David Maynard, A.B. Tennessee 1899 Speedwell, Tenn.
English, Education
1 Assistants in the University who are at the same time pursuing courses for the
higher degrees are not included in this list. Wherever the name of a State is given
after a degree, it signifies that the student has graduated from the given State
University.
260
POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY, ETC. 261
Ault, James Percy, A.B. Baker 1904 Ottawa, Kans.
Mathematics, Astronomy, Education
Autbnrieth, George Carl, A.M. 1906, B.S.C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
Mechanical Engineering
Aymar, Francis Whitcomb New York City
LL.B. N. Y. U. 1897. LL.M. 1899, J.D. 1903, B. C. S. 1907
International Law, Constitutional Law, History
Bailey, James Garfield, A.B, Colgate 1905 Scranton, Penn.
Sociology, Setnetics, Philosophy
Baker, Ezra Flavius New York City
A.M. 1904, A.B. Mo. Valley 1898, B.D. Cumberland 1901 and Union 1905
Philosophy, Psychology
Baldwin, Burton John, A.B. Wesleyan 1902 and Yale 1903 Woodbridge, Conn.
Sociology, History
Baldwin, Florence Theodora, A.B. 1900, A.M. 1902 New York City
Latin
Baldwin, Lorenzo Wilson, A.B. Bowdoin 1907 Newburyport, Mass.
Constitutional Law, Jurisprudence
Bamberger, Agnes Louise New York City
Geology
Barnes, Clyde Philander, A.B. Ohio Wesleyan 190s Shiloh, Ohio
Philosophy, Sociology
Barrett, Samuel Alfred, B.S. Cal. 1905, M.S. 1906 San Francisco, Cal.
Anthropology
Barrick, Mary Olive, A.B. 1901 Jersey City, N. J-
Latin
Barrows, Alice Prentice, A.B. Vassar 1900 New York City
English, Comparative Literature, Philosophy
Bartlett, Dwight Albert, A.B. Williams 1903 North Adams, Mass.
Chemistry
Basch, Edith Ames, B.S. Normal 1905 New York City
Botany
Baumer, Herbert Peter New York City
equiv. A.B. Kanton Schule, Frauenfeld, Switzerland, 1897
Const. Law, Jurisprudence, Economics
Baxter, Mabel Warren, A.M. 1907, A.B. Knox 1899 Galesburg, 111.
History
Baxter, R. Waverly, A.B. Cincinnati 1906 Cincinnati, Ohio
Philosophy, History
Beach, King D., A.B. Albion 1905, A.M. Pennsylvania 1907 Denton, Mich.
Social Economy
Becker, Frank Chester, A.B. Wesleyan 1905 Plymouth, Pa.
Philosophy, Psychology
Beckwith, Cora Jipson, B.S. Michigan 1900 Grand Rapids, Mich.
Zoology, Botany
Beeckman, Florence Louise, A.B. 1904, A.M. 1905 New York City
History
Bernays, Judith, A.B. 1907 New York City
History
Berry, Evis Howard, A. M. 1907, A.B. Mt. Holyoke 1903 New York City
Zoology, Psychology
Best, Harry, A.B. Centre 1901, A.M. George Washington 1902 Millersburg, Ky.
Social Economy, Administrative Law
Bissell, Rev. Pelham St. George Freeport, N. Y.
A.B. 1880, A.M. 1904, A. K. C. Kings 1899
Sociology
262 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Blakey, Leonard Stott, B.S. Beloit 1904 Estherville, la.
Sociology, Economics, Philosophy
Blocker, Simon, A.B. Rutgers 1905 New Brunswick, N. J.
Philosophy, Greek
Blumberg, Henry, A.B. 1907 New York City
Mathematics, Math. Physics, Physics
Bohler, Richard Frederick Styria, Austria
equiv. A.B. Oberrealschule, Vienna, 1888, Grad. Bergakademie, Berlin, 1906
Metallurgy, Physics
Bonsall, Victor Fitch Mount, A.B. 1901, A.M. 1903 New York City
English
Bowers, Larkin Bruce, B.L. Ohio Wesleyan 190s Greenfield, Ohio
Sociology
Bowman, Cora May, Ph.B. Syracuse 1893, Ph.M. 1895 New York City
Mathematics, Education
Boyle, Albert Clarence, B.S. Utah 1903 Salt Lake City, Utah
Geology, Mining
Boyle, John Neville, A.B. 1906 New York City
International Law, Administrative Law, Economics
Bradford, Arthur Howe, A.B. Yale 1905 Montclair, N. J.
Economics, Sociology, History
Brand, Charles Samuel, LL.B., N. Y, Law 1904 New York City
Constitutional Law
Brandau, George Julius, A.B. 1906 New York City
Germanic, Education
Brandenburg, Ellen K., B.S. George Washington 1904 Washington, D. C.
Botany, Education
Brautigam, Elisabeth Randall, A.B. 1906 East Orange, N. J.
Sociology
Breckinridge, Mary Grace, Ph.B. Cornell 1892 Binghamton, N. Y.
Germanic, Education
Breed, Persis, A.B. Vassar 1899 Louisville, Ky.
English, Education
Breene, Mary Luella, A.B. Allegheny 1899 Corry, Perm.
Latin, Education, History
Brett, George Monroe, A.B. Bowdoin 1897 Auburn, Me.
Mathematics, Astronomy
Brewster, Alice Dorothy, A.B. 1906, A.M. 1907 New York City
Comparative Literature
Brigham, L. Ward New York City
B.S. Lombard 1886, M.S. 1888, M.D. Bennett Med. 1890
Sociology, Anthropology
Brogan, Anthony J., Litt. B. Notre Dame 1901 New York City
English
Brown, Mary Louise Fort Worth, Tex.
English
Browne, Duncan Hodge, A.B. 1905 New York City
Sociology
Browne, Ethel Nicholson Baltimore, Md.
A.M. 1907, A.B. Woman's Coll. of Baltimore 1906
Zoology, Botany
Browne, Mabel Emma, A.B. 1906 New York City
Mathematics
Bruce, Walter Joseph, A.B. Cumberland 189s West Nashville, Tenn.
Sociology
Brunson, George Henry Clinton, Miss
A.B., Mississippi Coll. 1898, A.M. 1900, Chicago 1901
History, Constitutional Law
AND PURE SCIENCE 263
Buchbinder, Hyman Elias, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1901 New York City
Chemistry, Biol. Chemistry
Bucher, Maria E., A.B. Woman's College Baltimore 1905 Lebanon, Penn.
Germanic, Education
Buck, Karl Wilhelm Emden, Germany
LL.B. 1907, equiv. A.B. Gymnasium, Emden, Germany 1899
Jurisprudence
Buckley, Francis, A.B. Holy Cross 1905, A.M. Yale 1906 Bridgeport, Conn.
English
Buland, Mable Electa, A.B. Washington 1904 Castle Rock, Wash.
English, Comparative Literature
Burger, Eugenie New York City
English
Burlingham, Gertrude Simmons, A.B. Syracuse 1896 New York City
Botany, Biol. Chemistry
Butler, Alice S., A.B. Cornell 1903 Indianapolis, Ind.
English, Comparative Literature
Butler, Bertram Theodore, Ph.B. Hamline 1901 Helena, Mont.
Botany, Geology
Butler, Cora Leila, A.B. Wellesley 1904 St. Louis, Mo.
Mathematics, Philosophy
Byerly, Eva Mary, A.B. Michigan 1901 Anamosa, la.
Latin, History
Byrne, Margaret Cecelia, A.B. 1905 New York City
Greek, Latin
Camera, Americo Ulysses Nicholas, A.M. 1901, Ph.B. N.Y.U. 1900. .New York City
Romance
Carlson, Ernest William, A.B. Augustana 1905 Kenilworth, N. J.
Mathematics
Carpentier, Marius Alexander, B.S. C. C. C. N. Y. 1889 New York City
Romance, German
Carter, George Bradley, B.S Amherst 1906 New York City
History, Sociology
Casterlin, Erle Hoyt, Ph.B. Alma 1907 Mason, Mich.
History, Political Philosophy, Economics
Castritsy, George Peter New York City
English
Catlin, Warren Benjamin, A.B. Nebraska 1903 Peru, Neb.
Economics, Sociology, Constitutional Law
Cawley, Agnes Alice, A.B. Brown 1904 Bayonne, N. J.
English, Philosophy
Cazin, Adele, B.S..1904 Hoboken, N. J
Chemistry
Chaddock, Robert Emmet, A.M. 1906, A.B. Wooster 1900 Minerva, Ohio
Sociology, Economics
Chamberlain, Ernest Barrett, A.B. Oberlin 1904, A.M. 1906 Oberlin, Ohio
Chinese
Chapman, Mildred Bice, Ph.B. Syracuse 1903 East Cobleskill, N. Y.
History, Economics
Chase, Alice Goddard, A.B. 1896 New York City
Sociology, History
Chen, Huan-Chang, equiv. A.B. Chin-Shih College, Peking, 1904. .. .Canton, China
Economics, International Law, Constitutional Law
Chen, W. F., equiv. A.B. Peking 1904, B.S. Ohio Wesleyan 1906 Peking, China
Metallurgy, Geology, Mining
Chodorov, Frank, A.B. 1907 New York City
English, German
264 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Clapp, Elsie New York City
Philosophy
Clark, John Maurice, A.M. 1906, A.B. Amherst 1905 New York City
Economics, Constitutional Law
Clark, Walter Ernest Defiance, Ohio
Ph.D. 1903, A.B. Ohio Wesleyan 1896, A.M. 1898
Sociology
Clarke-Smith, Linda, B.S. 1906, A.M. 1907 New York City
Sociology, History
Clarkson, William Temple Birmingham, Ala.
Sociology, Economics
Cohen, Alexander, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Semitic s, Philosophy, Sociology
Cohen, Helen Louise, A.B. 1903, A.M. 1905 New York City
English
Cole, Marion Lucena, A.B. Wellesley 1907 Yonkers, N. Y.
Philosophy, English
Coleman, Anna Aloysius, A.B. Trinity (D.C.) 1904 Pelham Manor, N. Y.
French
Collins, Charles Moore, A.B. Lincoln 1894, A.M. 1896 New York City
Economics
Colodny, Isidor, Ph.B. Vermont 1905, A.M. 1907 New York City
English, Comparative "Literature
Comin, Robert, A.B. Princeton 1897 New York City
History
Conant, Sarah Howard, A.M. 1906, B.S. Wellesley 1887 North Thetford, Vt.
Sociology
Cooper, Clayton Sedgwick, A.M. 1907, A.B. Brown 1894 Montclair, N. J.
Philosophy
Corcoran, Charles Aloysius, A.M. 1906, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Math. Physics, Physics
Coss' John Jacob, A.B. Wabash 1906 Greencastle, Ind.
Philosophy, Sociology
Craig, Percy Gaines, A.M. 1907, A.B. Arkansas 1906 Little Rock, Ark.
Germanic, English
Crawford, Leonidas Wakefield, Jr Greensboro, N. C.
A.M. 1903, A.B. Trinity (N.C.) 1898
English
Curtis, Charles Densmore, A.B. Pomona 1900, A.M. Colorado 1901 . .New York City
Latin, Greek
Darby, William Lambert, A.B. Cumberland 1895, B.D. 1898 New York City
Sociology
Dargan, Alice Woods, A.B. Winthrop 1902 Darlington, S. C.
English, Latin
Datar, Anant Narayan, A.B. Bombay 1891, LL.B. 1893 Baroda, India
Sociology, Economics, Political Philosophy
Davies, Thomas, A.B. Kings (Nova Scotia) 1899, A.M. i902.Windsor, Nova Scotia, Can.
Philosophy, History
Davis, Alice, A.M. 1904, Ph.B. Chicago 1899 New York City
History
Davis, Ashton Weymouth, B. S. Wesleyan 1900 Hackettstown, N. J.
Chemistry, Biological Chemistry
Davis, Dora Wilhelmina, A.B. Wesleyan 1902 New York City
English
Davis, Robert, A.M. 1907, A.B. Dartmouth 1903 Harwichport, Mass.
Sociology, Economics
Davis, William Hawley, A.B. Harvard 1905 New York City
English, Comparative Literature
AND PURE SCIENCE 265
Davis, William Watson Oak Grove, Ala.
A.M. 1906, B.S. Ala. Polytech. 1903, M.S. 1904
History, Economics
Dbmcott, Orey Mason, A.B. Keuka 1903, B.D. Union 1907 Wood Ridge, N. J.
Sociology
De Grange, McQuilkin, a.B. Johns Hopkins 1900, Catholic U. i903..Frederick, Md.
Comparative Literature, English
DeWalsh, Faust Charles, A.B. Rochester 1903 New York City
Germanic, French
Dhalla, Maneckji Nusservanji, A.M. 1907 Surat, India
I ndo -Iranian, Philosophy
Dice, Charles Amos, A.B. Ohio Northern 1905 Strasburg, Ohio
Philosophy
Dickinson, Henry Nash, A.B. Amherst 1889 New York City
Latin
Dillon, Augustus Ignatius, A.B. Amherst 1906 Cortland, N. Y.
English
Dodd, Frederick Ferris, A.B. Yale 1905 New York City
History
Dodd, Rolin, B.S. Whitman 1906 Seattle, Wash.
Philosophy, History
Donohoe, John A., A.B. St. Francis Xavier 1901 New York City
English
Dotey, Aaron Isaac, A. B. De Pauw 1890 New York City
Latin
Doty, Katharine Swift, A.B. 1904, A.M. 1905 New York City
History
Dougherty, Philip, B.S. Trinity (Conn.) 1907 Charleston, 111.
History, Philosophy
Dox, Ralph Watson, A.B. 1906 Lockport, N. Y.
Jurisprudence, Sociology
Dredge, Robert Frederick Garfield, A.B. Manitoba 1907 . . Rockwood, Ont., Canada
Sociology
Dunham, Samuel Raymond, A.B. Ohio Wesleyan 1906 Delaware, Ohio
Philosophy, Sociology
Dutton, Louise Elizabeth, A.B. Vassar 1905 Ellsworth, Maine
English
Eddy, Walter Hollis, B.S. Amherst 1898 New York City
Biological Chemistry
Edelblute, Lucius Aaron, A.M. 1907, A.B. Kenyon 1904 Chicago, 111.
History, Sociology
Edocombe, Olive Ballard, A.B. Vassar 1907 Cortland, N. Y.
History, Sociology
Edgell, Frank Dexter, A.B. Amherst 1893 New York City
Psychology
Edmunds, Amy Gertrude, A.B. Nevada 1897 Butte, Mont.
English, Comparative Literature
Egelson, Louis Isaac, A.M. 1907, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Semitics, Philosophy
Elmore, Robert B., A.B. Princeton 1901 Chattanooga, Term.
Education
Elting, Mabel, A.B. 1901 New Paltz, N. Y.
English
Emerson, Ethel M., A.B. Cornell 1902 New York City
English
Emery, Stephen, A.B. Boston 1890, A.M. 1903 New York City
Mathematics
266 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Erickson, Percy Elwood, A.B. Dartmouth 1906 Newark, N. J.
Sociology, History
Erwin, Marguerite, A.B. Randolph-Macon Woman's 1907 Washington, D. C.
History, English
Etheridge, Pearl Huntley, A.B. Meridian 1904 Hamburg, Ark.
English
Fedter, Bruno, A.M. 1905, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 New York City
Latin, Greek
Feigenbaum, William Morris, A.B. 1907 New York City
History, Sociology
Feinberg, Benjamin George, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Chemistry, Metallurgy
Fenner, Clarence Norman, E.M. 1892 Paterson, N. J.
Geology, Mining
Ferrari, Robert Anthony, A.B. 1905, A.M. 1907 New York City
English, History
Fichandler, Alexander, A.B. N. Y. U. 1905 New York City
Sociology
Field, Horace Luther, A.B. Cornell 1902 New York City
Greek, Latin
Fish, Joseph Burton, B. S. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Zoology
Fisher, Edgar Jacob, A.B. Rochester 1906, A.M. 1907 Rochester, N. Y.
History, Economics
Fitch, George Ashmore, B.S. Wooster 1906 Shanghai, China
Chinese, Philosophy, History
Flatow, Jacob, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Romance
Flexner, Abraham, A.B. Johns Hopkins 1886, A.M. Harvard 1906 New York City
Philosophy
Focht, Mildred, A.B. Bryn Mawr 1904 Plainville, Conn.
English, Philosophy
Forman, Raymond Lalor, Ph.B. Wesleyan 1907 New York City
Economics
Fosdick, Harry Emerson, A.B. Colgate 1900, B.D. Union 1904 Montclair, N. J.
Sociology, Economics
Foster, Helen Wright, A.B. Vassar 1901 Orange, N. J,
Germanic, Comparative Literature
Foster, Walter Eugene, A.B. Williams 1899 New York City
Latin
Fowler, Susan, A.B. Bryn Mawr 1895 Catonsville, Md.
Latin
Frachtenberg, Leo Joachim, A.M. 1906 New York City
Linguistics, Indo-lranian, German
France, Harry A., A.B. Michigan 1903 Milwaukee, Wis.
English
Frank, Coleman Dudley, Ph.B. Michigan 1897, A.M. 1901 Toledo Ohio
Romance
Franklin, Alberta Mildred, A.B. Wellesley 1904 Atlantic Highlands, N. J.
Latin
Frapwell, Albert, A.B. Michigan 1907 Morristown. N. J.
Chemistry, Metallurgy, Geology
Freece, Hans Peter, A.B. Park 1904 Salina, Utah
History, Political Philosophy, Constitutional Law
Friedland, Louis Sigmund, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
English, Comparative Literature
Frost, Jacob Moses, equiv. A.B. Gymnasium Przemysl, Austria 1904. . .New York City
Germanic
AND PURE SCIENCE 267
Fuchs, Samuel Alexander, B.S. 1907 New York City
Chemistry
Gabriel, Bertram Adolph, A.B. Yale 1907 New York City
Constitutional Law, Jurisprudence
Gallatin, Goelet, A.B. 1900 New York City
Economics
Gardner, Edward Hall, A.B. Amherst 190s Chester, N. J.
English, Comparative Literature
Garnier, Horatio Knight, Grad. General, Theol. Sem. 1906 Trenton, N. J.
Philosophy, Sociology
Gelbach, Marie, A.B. 1906, A.M. 1907 New York City
Germanic, French
Gere, Louisa Brewster, A.B. Wellesley 1889 Fulton, N. Y.
Comparative Literature
Gerrish, William Churchill, A.M. 1907, A.B. Harvard 1899.. New Canaan, Conn.
History, Sociology
Giehl, Jennie A., A.B. Vassar 1902 Rome, N. Y.
Germanic, Education
Gildersleeve, Virginia Crocheron, A.B. 1899, A.M. 1900 New York City
English
Gillet, Louis Bliss, A.B. 1904 New York City
English
Gladwin, Harry Williams, A.B. Amherst 1905 Westfield, Mass.
History, English
Gluck, Emil, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1896 New York City
Psychology, Education
Goertner, (Mrs.) Rosamond, B.S. 1907 New York City
History
Goldberg, Hirsch, Ph.D. Prague 1902 New York City
Philosophy, Sociology, Economics
Goldberg, Samuel Isaac, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Mathematics, Math. Physics
von Goldberger, Tibor Budapest, Hungary, Austria
equiv. A.B. Friedrich Wilhelm Gymnasium, Agrano, Hungary, 1907
Economics, Jurisprudence, Administrative Law
Goldfarb, Abraham J., B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1900 New York City
Zoology, Physiology
Goldsmith, Alfred Norton, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1907 New York City
Physics, Math. Physics, Mathematics
Gollomb, Joseph, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
Education
Goodhart, Helen Lehman, A.B. 1907 New York City
Sociology
Goodlatte, Amelia R., A.B. Wells 1900 Passaic, N. J.
Botany
Goodwin, Edna, A.B. Friends 1902 Wichita, Kans.
Greek
Gorfinkxe, Joseph Isaac, A.B. Harvard 1903, A.M. 1904 Boston, Mass.
Semitics, Economics
Goudt, Franklin Burris, A.B. Stanford 1907 Denver, Colo.
Mining, Mineralogy, Geology
Graham, Susan Philippa, A.B. Cornell 1904 New Rochelle, N. Y.
English
Gratigny, R. K New York City
Physics
Gray, Claudine, A.B. Normal 1897 New York City
Romance
268 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Gray, Louis Herbert, A.M. 1898, Ph.D. 1900, A.B. Princeton 1896. ..Newark, N. J.
Semitics
Green, Howard Charles, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
History
Green, Thomas Toronto, Canada
A.B. Toronto 1902, A.M. 1906, B.D. Victoria 1906
Philosophy, Education, Sociology
Greenberg, Jacob, A.M. 1905, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Philosophy
Greer, Florence, A.B. Vassar 1899 New York City
Philosophy
Gregory, John H., Jr Paris, France
International Law
Gregory, Louise Hoyt, A.M. 1907, A.B. Vassar 1903 Princeton, Mass.
Zoology, Botany
Grendon, Felix, A.M. 1902, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1900 New York City
English
Gries, John Matthew, A.B. Miami 1905, A.M. 1906 New York City
Economics
Griffin, Howard Cousens, A.B. Bowdoin 1904 Bangor, Me.
Chemistry
Griffith, Priscilla, B.S. 1907 Fredonia, N. Y,
English, History
Gross, Henry Isaac, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Mathematics
Guebin, Louise, equiv. A.B. Lyc£e Moliexe 1901 New York City
Romance
Guthrie, Kenneth Sylvan Philadelphia, Perm .
Ph.D. Tulane 1894, A.M. Harvard 1895, M.D. Medico Chirurg'l Phila. 1904
I ndo -Iranian
Guthrie, William Buck New York City
Ph.D. 1907, B.S. Lenox 1893, Ph.B. Iowa 1895
Sociology
Guynn, Edgar Hart, A.B. Yale 1906 Ridgefield, N. J.
English
Haas, George Christian Otto, A.B. 1902, A.M. 1903 New York City
Indo-Iranian
Haefelin, Fanny Josephine, B.S. 1905 Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Germanic
Haessler, Luise, A.B. Chicago 1906 New York City
Germanic
Hall, Henry Marion, A.B. Harvard 1899 New York City
English
Hall, Walter Phelps, A.B. Yale 1906 Newburgh, N. Y.
History, Economics
Halliday, Edgar, A.M., 1902, A.B. Princeton 1898 New York City
Latin
Halpern, Morris New York City
Sociology
Halsted, Harry Howard, A.B. C. C, N. Y. 1904 New York City
Education
Ham, Edward Orvtllb, A.B. Michigan 1907 Chicago, 111.
English
Handy, Edith Berkeley, A.B. 1905 New York City
Zoology
Hanke, Emil, A.B. Colgate 1907 Buffalo, N. Y
Germanic, Comparative Literature
AND PURE SCIENCE 269
H ankins, Frank Hamilton, A.B. Baker 1901 New York City
Sociology, Economics
Hannah, Florence, A.B. Vassar 1903 Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
English
Hardy, Helen Elizabeth, A.B. Wilson 1907 Easton, Penn .
English, French
Hare, Russell Ingman, A.B. Ohio State 190s Muskegee, I. T.
Constitutional Law, History
Harrington, Mark Raymond, B.S., 1907 New York City
Anthropology, Sociology
Harrison, Earl Stanley, A.B. Toronto 1894 New York City
Romance
Harrison, Lester, A.B. 1907 New York City
Comparative Literature, French
Harvitt, Helen Josephine, A.B. 1907 New York City
Romance
Haskell, Juliana (Mrs. H. S.), A.B. 1904, A.M. 1905 New York City
German ic, Romance
Hathaway, Galen Bishop, A.M. 1906, A.B. Missouri 1902 New York City
Economics, Sociology, English
Hattom, Isaiah Muradkhon, equiv. A.B. Urmiah 1903 Urmiah, Persia
Philosophy
Hauch, Edward Franklin, A.B. Toronto 1907 Pembroke, Canada
Germanic
Hayman, Jacob, A.M., 1906, C. E. Brown 1894 New York City
Sociology
Hayward, Afton Smith, B.S. Amherst 1906 Amherst, Mass.
Germanic
Hellin, Lilian, A.B. 1907 New York City
Philosophy
Hendricks, Ethel, A.B. 1903, A.M. 1907 New York City
Latin
Henricks, Walter Abraham, A.B. Princeton 1907 Philadelphia, Penn.
English, Philosophy
Henriques, Maurice Cohn, A.B. C. C. C N. Y. 1903 New York City
Mathematics
Henry, James McClure, A.B. Wooster 1901, B.D. Union 1907. . . .Canonsburg, Penn.
Semitics
Herbert, Leon M., A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Romance, Semitics
Herrmann, Senta, A.B. 1906, A.M. 1907 New York City
Philosophy, Psyclwlogy
Hertzog, Walter Sylvester, A.B. Harvard 1905 Shamokin, Penn.
Sociology, Social Economy
Heuermann, Helena F., A.B. Adelphi 1902 New York City
Germanic
Hevesh, Joseph New York City
Semitics, Philosophy, Sociology
Heynich, Richard Otto New York City
equiv. A.B. Lehrer Seminar, Osterode, Germany, 1892
Germanic
Higgins, Eric Liverpool, England
A.M. S. T. Municipal Technical School, Manchester, 1903, B.S. Owens College,
Manchester, 1906
Chemistry, Physics
Hine, Lewis W New York City
Sociology
270 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Hirsch, Rev. Max Alfred Leopold Newark, N. J.
equiv. A.B. Gymnasium, Torgau, Germany, 1888, equiv. B.D. 1891
Sociology, Economics, History
Hirschensohn, Esther, A.M. 1907 Hoboken, N. J.
Philosophy, French
Hirschensohn, Nima, A.M. 1907 Hoboken, N. J.
Philosophy, French
Hirsh, Abel New York City
A.M. 1907 equiv. A.B. Beth Hamidrasch, Frankfurt, Germany, 1903
Semitics, Philosophy, Sociology
Hodgetts, Abbie Sylvia, A.M. 1902, A.B. Nebraska "Wesleyan 1896. .New York City
English
Holbrook, Charles Henry, A.B. Boston 1902, A.M. 1903 Lynn, Mass.
English
Holliday, John Hampden, Jr Indianapolis, Ind.
B.S. Mass. Inst, of Tech. 1905
Metallurgy, Chemistry
Holt, Carrie Maude, A.B. Wellesley 1903 Saxton River, Vt.
Zoology, Physiology
Holtzoff, Alexander New York City
Political Philosophy, Constitutional Law
Honda, Masujiro, equiv. A.B. Kobur Gakkwin 1890 Okayama, Japan
Oriental Languages
Hopkins, Mary Alden, A.B. Wellesley .1900 Bangor, Maine
English, Psychology
Horiuchi, Shuntaro Tokyo, Japan
equiv. A.B. Waseda 1903
Economics, Sociology
Horton, Byron Barnes, A.M. 1907, B.S. Penn. Stated 189 5 Sheffield, Penn.
Zoology
House, Homer Doliver, A.M. 1904, B.S. Syracuse 1902 Oneida, N. Y.
Botany
Howe, Herbert Barber, A.B. Williams"i9os East Orange, N. J.
Sociology, History
Howe, Walter Edwin Jersey City, N. J.
Philosophy
Hoyt, Sarah Fenton, A.B. 1905 New York City
Semitics
Hubbell, Mrs. Lucy Bates, A.B. 1904 New York City
English
Hulst, George Duryee, A.B. Williams 1906 New York City
Sociology, Social Economy
Humphrey, Adele, A.B. Kansas 1895 Topeka, Kans.
English, Comparative Lit., Philosophy
Humphreys, Edwin William, A.M. 1906, A.B.'C. C. N.!Y.!i903 New York City
Geology
Hunnex, William A Chingkiang, China
Chinese
Hunt. Arthur Prince New York City
A.B. Amherst 1897, A.M. 1900, B.D. General Theol. Sem. 1901
Philosophy
Hunt, May Leland, B.L. Wisconsin 1897. M.L. 1898 Oneida, N. Y.
English
Hunter, Graham Chambers, A.B. Princeton 1904 Denver, Colo.
Economics
Hutchinson, Emilie Josephine, A.B. 190s New York City
Economics
AND PURE SCIENCE 271
Huth, Carl Frederick Lodwig, A.B. Wisconsin 1904, A.M. 190s • . . .Milwaukee, Wis.
History, Jurisprudence
Hyde, Henrietta B New York City
Social Economy
Hyde, Jesse Earl, A.M. 1907, A.B. Ohio State 1906 Lancaster, Ohio
Geology, Zoology
Ichinose, Gonroku, equiv. A.M. Tokyo 1903 Tokyo, Japan
Economics, Sociology, International Law
Inagaki, Yocchiro, Grad. St. Paul's (Tokyo) 1896 Wakayama, Japan
Sociology
Ingraham, Olin, A.M. 1905, Ph.B. Wesleyan 1904 New York City
Economics
Inouye, Shinwo, equiv. A.B. Imperial Tokyo Univ. 1905 Echigo, Japan
Philosophy, Education
Intemann, Alfred Christopher, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Constitutional haw
I oki, Toshi, A.B. Nippon Law College 1895 Onsengun, Japan
Sociology, Economics, History
Isaacs, Charles Applewhite, A.B. Indiana 1905 Brownstown, Ind.
Mathematics, Math. Physics
Isham, Alfred Fenner, A.B. Colorado College 1900 Milton, Wis.
English, Comparative Literature
Ives, Pauline New York City
Comparative Literature
Jacobs, Leo, A.M. 1905, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1900 New York City
Philosophy, Psychology
Jacobs, Philip Peter, A.B. Syracuse 1903 Madison, N. J,
Sociology, Social Economy, History
James, Rosalie Telfair, A.B. Bryn Mawr 1903 Columbus, Ohio
Romance, Comparative Literature
Jennings, Corinne Marie, A.B. St. Elizabeth 1905 Washington, D. C.
Mathematics
Joffe, Joshua Abraham, equiv. A.B. Gymnasium, Berlin 1888 New York City
Philosophy, English
Johnson, Alice Harlow, A.B. Radclifle 1903 Augusta, Maine
English, Education
Johnson, Roswell H., B.S. Chicago 1900, M. S. Wis. 1903 . .Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y.
Geology
Johnson, William Alan, Ph.B. Illinois Wesleyan 1904 Newark, N. J.
Chemistry
Jollon, Alfred John, A.B. St. John's (Bklyn) 1905 New York City
International Law, Constitutional Law, Political Philosophy
Jouard, Farel Louis, A.B. 1904 New York City
Chemistry
Kahn, Lena, equiv. A.B. Gymnasium, Libau, Russia, 1904 New York City
Germanic, Philosophy
Kakusen, Nibu Japan
Philosophy
Kane, Thomas Francis, A.B. Cornell 1892 New York City
Mathematics
Karnopp, Charles Frederick, A.B. Colorado 1905 Almond, Wis.
Sociology, Philosophy
Kato, Taijiro, equiv. A.B. Waseda 1907 ' Tokyo, Japan
Economics, Sociology, Political Philosophy
Katzenstein, Charles Jackson, A.B. North Carolina 1907 Warren Plains, N. C.
Constitutional Law
Keep, Austin Baxter, A.B. Amherst 1897, A.M. 1901 New York City
History — ,
272 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Kemp, William Cullen Bryant New York City
A.B. 1900, A.M. 1901, LL.B. 1896, LL.M. 1901
International Law
Kennedy, Mary Stewart New York City
A.M. 1902, A.B. Adelphi 1901, Pd. D. N. Y. U. 1902
Comparative Literature
Kennedy, Maxwell Miller New York City
English
Keyser, Herman Julius New York City
Philosophy
Kibbe, William Johnson Galveston, Tex.
A.B. Austin 1903, B.D. Austin Theol. Sem. 1907
Philosophy, Sociology
Kilroe, Edwin Patrick, A.B. 1904, A.M. 1905, LL.B. 1906 Tanners Falls, Penn.
Constitutional Law
Kimball, Elizabeth Gardner, A.B. Radcliffe, 1903 Nashua, N. H.
History, English
Kimura, Tokuzo, A.B. Stanford 1906 Hirobuchi, Japan
Zoology, Botany
Kingsley, Clarence Darwin, A.M. 1904, B.S. Colgate 1897 New York City
Philosophy
Klapper, Paul, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904, A.M. N. Y. U. 1907 New York City
Economics
Klauber, Mrs. Adolph New York City
English
Kleeberg, Gordon Saul Philip, A.B. 1905, A.M. 1906, LL.B. 1907. . .New York City
Constitutional Law
Kneisly, George Wallace, B.S. Oklahoma 1907 Guthrie, Okla.
Geology, Mineralogy, Metallurgy
Knickerbocker, William Edwin, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Romance, English
Koeberlin, Frederic Richard, B.S. Mo. School of Mines 1901. Cananca, Sonora, Mex.
Geology, Mining
Kohn, Lucile, A.B. 1903, A.M. 1905 New York City
Sanskrit
Korn, Albert Ralph New York City
Economics
Korn, Harold, A.B. 1901 New York City
Social Economy, International Law, Jurisprudence
Koyama, Tanizo Misumura, Japan
Economics, Sociology
Kranz, James Philip, A.B. Minnesota 1904 St. Paul, Minn.
Social Economy
Krenning, Edna Amelia, B.S. 1907 Fort Recovery, Ohio
English, Comparative Literature
Kropff, Alfred Hemmer, B.S. (Chem.) 1907 New York City
Chemistry, Physics
Kumamoto, Saichi, Grad. Kobe' Higher Commercial 1907 Tokyo, Japan
Economics, Sociology, International Law
Kumoi, Kenjiro, equiv. A.B. Waseda 1907 Tokyo, Japan
Economics, Sociology, Political Philosophy
Kurtz, Anna Elizabeth, Ph.B. Ohio 1901 East Stroudsburg, Penn.
Geology
Kuschke, Charles, equiv. Mech. E. Mittweida Technikum 1906. .Polkwitz, Germany
Mathematics, Physics, Math. Physics
Lake, Henrietta, B.S. St. Lawrence 1886 New York City
Sociology, History
AND PURE SCIENCE 273
Lambuth, David Kelley, A.M. 1901, A.B. Vandcrbilt 1900 Nashville, Tenn.
English
Lamont, Florence Corliss, A.M. 1898, B.S. Smith 1893 Englewood, N. J.
Philosophy
Lane, Beatrice Erskine, A.B. Radcliffe 1898 Stamford, Conn.
Social Economy, Philanthroy
Larson, James Henry, Ph. B. Chicago 1906 Holyoke, Mass.
Social Philosophy, Philanthrophy
Lasher, William Reuben, Ph.B. St. Lawrence 1899 New York City
Mathematics
Latham, Marcia Louise, B.S. North Carolina 1900 Plymouth, N. C.
Mathematics
Lawrence, Lillie Maria, B.S. 1905 Lebanon, N. H.
Latin
Leavitt, Charlotte Mendell, Ph.B. Michigan 1899 Topeka, Kans.
English, Comparative Literature
Lee, Eli Franklin, A.B. Trinity (N. C.) 1905 East Durham, N. C
Sociology
Lee, Marguerite Thourn, B.S. Cornell 1894, A.M. N. Y. U. 1905 .... New York City
Zoology
Leeds, Warner Mifflin New York City
History, Economics
Leland, Abby Porter, A.B. 1905, A.M. 1906 Mechanicsville, N. Y.
Philosophy
Leland, Fannibelle, A.B. 1905 New York City
English, German
Lemowitz, Nathan Harry, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Sociology
Lessey, Beatrice, A.B. Stanford 1905 California
Romance, English
Lester, Caroline Foote, B.S. 1903 Seneca Falls, N. Y.
English, History
Lester, Claud Frederick, B.S. Middlebury 1903 Elizabeth, N. J.
History
Leuchs, Frederick Adolph Herman, A.B. 1907 New York City
Gertnanic, Education
Levine, Louis New York City
Sociology, Philosophy
Levine, Morris, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Semitics, Philosophy
Lewinski, Edward Henry New York City
equiv. A.B. Oberrealschule, Warsaw, Russia
Economics, Sociology, Constitutional Law
Lewis, Ernest D New York City
A.B. Stanford 1892, A.M. 1893, A.M. Harvard 1897
History, Economics
Lewis, Joseph Volney New Brunswick, N. J.
B.S. North Carolina 1891, B.S. Harvard 1893
Geology
Lichtenberger, James P., A.B. Eureka 1893, A.M. Hiram 1902 New York City
Sociology, Philosophy
Linehan, Paul Henry, A.B. Havard 1902 New York City
Mathematics
Lipe, Mary Victoria, A.B. Vanderbilt 1907 Nashville, Tenn.
Greek, Latin, Philosophy
Lipsky, Abram, A.M. 1900, Ph.D. 1907, Ph.B. Rochester 1895 Rochester, N. Y.
Psychology
274 POLITICAL SCIENCE PHILOSOPHY,
Livingston, Albert Arthur, A.B. Amherst 1904 Attleboro, Mass.
Romance, Latin
Locke, Caroline Marion, A.B. Wellesley 1900 Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Latin
Long, Emilie Olivia, B.S. Normal 1902 New York City
Geology
Lothrop, Alfred Peirce, A.B. Oberlin 1901, A.M. 1907 Leominster, Mass.
Chemistry, Physics
Lowenthal, Esther, A.B. Bryn Mawr 1905 Rochester, N. Y.
Economics, Sociology, History
Lowther, Edgar Allen, A.B. Syracuse 1902, B.D. Union 1907 New York City
Sociology
Lubarsky, Louis Henry, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Mathematics, Physics
Lucas, Daniel Ralph Lafayette, Ind.
A.M. 1906, M.D. 1907, B.S. Purdue 1903, Ph.G. 1901
Biological Chemistry , Physiology
Lucas, Edmund DeLong, A.B. Wooster 1903 Lahore, India
Semitics
Luccock, Halford Edward, A.B. Northwestern 1906 St. Louis, Mo.
Philosophy
Luetscher, George Daniel, B.L. Wis. 1898, Ph.D. Penn. 1902. .Prairie-du-Lac, Wis.
History
Lupton, Edmund Rut an, A.B. Yale 1906 Mattituck, N. Y.
Economics, Sociology, Constitutional Law
Lyman, Carroll Sanford, A.B. Oberlin 1907 Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Chemistry
Lynne, May, A.M. 1906, equiv. A.B. Cambridge, England, 1891 New York City
Sociology
Lyon, Darwin Oliver Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Psychology, Zoology, Physiology
McBee, Mary Vardrine, A.B. Smith 1906 Great Neck, N. Y.
History, Education
McBride, Arthur Andrews Austin, Minn.
B.S. Minnesota 1900, S.T.B. Andover 1907
History, Education
McCanliss, Lee E., A.B. Wabash 1907 Rockville, Ind.
Jurisprudence, History
.McClelland, George William, A.B. Pennsylvania 1903 Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.
English
McEvers, Vida New York City
English
McGrann, William Hugh, Grad. U. S. Naval Acad. 1891 Memphis, Tenn.
Economics
McKee, Elsa Du Bois, A.B. 1907 New York City
Philosophy
McKenna, Mary Elizabeth, A.B. Trinity (D. C.) 1907 New York City
Mathematics
McKenzie, William Tullock Morrisburg, Ont., Canada
Sociology
McKim, Christina L., A.B. 1901 New York City
Social Economy, History
McKinney, Mary Eula, A.B. Ohio State 1906 Columbus, Ohio
English
McLane, Fannie Moulton, A.B. 1907 New York City
History, Education
AND PURE SCIENCE 275
McLoughlin, William Gerald, A.B. St. Francis Xavier 1907 Jersey City, N. J.
Economies, History
McMakin, Annie, A.B. Converse 1S9S Spartanburg, S. C.
English, Education
McMichakl, James, A.B. Occidental 1906 Winnebago, 111.
Sociology, Social Economy
McMillen, Eleanor, Ph.B. Syracuse 1905 New York Citv
Latin
McNeely, Elizabeth, A.M. 1905, A.B. Toronto 1896. . . .Carleton Place, Ont., Canada
History
MacGregor, Charles Peter, A.B. McMaster 1899 New York City
II i story
Mackay, Elizabeth, A.B. Washington 1902 Pullman, Wash.
English, Sociology
Mackenzie, Alexander, A.B. 1905 Dobbs Ferry, N. Y
Matltcmatics, Economics, History
Mackley, Mary Elizabeth, A.M. 1907, A.B. Ursinus 1902 Westfield, N. J.
English
MacLachlan, Catherine Fisher, A.B. Toronto 1904, A.M. 1905. .Toronto, Canada
English, Comparative Literature
MacLean. Donald Charles, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Mathematics
Macmillan, Beulah Arnold, L.I. and B.L. Nashville 1901 Charleston, S. C.
English, Education
MacVay, Anna Pearl, A.B. Ohio 1892 Athens, Ohio
Greek, Latin
Madison, Hector Tripp, A.B. Michigan 1906 New York City
Constitutional Law, Economics, Sociology
Magarge, Samuel John, Jr New York City
A.B. St. Joseph's 1896, A.M. 1898, B.S. Pennsylvania 1900
Mathematics
Mailloux, Cyprien Odilon New York City
E.E. Brooklyn Polytechnic 1905, M.S. 1906
Mathematical Physics
Manguse, William P., A.B. Colgate 1890 New York City
Mathematics
Manley, Annie Laurie, A.B. 1907 New York City
Philosophy, English, French
Mann, Kristine, A.B. Smith 1895, A.M. Michigan 1901 New York City
Philosophy
Margolis, Louis, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
Mathematics, Math. Physics
Mark, Mary Louise Rushville, Ohio
A.M. 1907, A.B. Ohio State 1903
Social Economy
Marshall, Thomas Franklin, A.B. Lake Forest 1894 Lebanon, 111.
History
Mathewson, Chester Arthur, B.S. 1905, A.M. 1906 Cincinnati, Ohio
Physiology
Maves, Albert Edward, A.B. 1906 New York City
Constitutional Law, International Law, Economics
May, Clarence Earl, A.B. Indiana 1904, A.M. 1905 Bloomington, Ind.
Chemistry
Maynard, Harrison Alberto, A.B. Washburn 1904 Muscotah, Kans.
Education
Melamed, Raphael Hai, A.B. N. Y. U. 1906 New York City
Philosophy
276 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Melleck, Anna Cole, A.B. 1896 New York City
Latin
Melville, Norbert J., A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 Deer Park, N. Y.
Education
Menkes, Jacob Bernard New York City
equiv. A.B. Gymnasium, Lemberg, Austria, 1906
Germanic, Sociology
Merlis, Isaac, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1907 New York City
Physics
Merrett, Mrs. Christabel Coe, Ph.B. Wesleyan 1901 Middlefield, Conn.
Philosophy
Messer, William Stuart, A.B. 1905 Jersey City, N. J.
Latin, Greek
Metzger. Louise Gertrude Wagemann, B.S. 1907 Elmira, N. Y.
Germanic, English
Meyer, Arnold William, A.M. 1905, A.B. Iowa Coll. 1899 Alton, la.
Chemistry , Physics
Michael, Winiferd, A.B. Normal 1902 New York City
Semitic s
Miller, Alvenia Barnette, A. M. 1903 Columbia, S. C.
English
Miller, Donald Herbert Truesdell, A.B. 1907 Binghamton, N. Y.
Chemistry, Physics
Miller, Orley Lester, A.B. Washburn 1906 Minneapolis, Kans.
Sociology
Minkin, Jacob Samuel, A.B. 1907 New York City
Semitics, Sociology
Mitchell, James Clayton, A.B. Pennsylvania 1889 Hoboken, N. J.
Philosophy, English
Mittag, Frank Otto, Jr., B.S. Rutgers 1906 Park Ridge, N. J.
Chemistry
Momikura, Sakusuke Hiroshima Ken, Japan
Sociology
Monks, William Douglas, Mech. E. 1907 Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Mechanical Engineering, Math. Physics, Mathematics
Montgomery, Bell Woods, A.M. 1907, A.B. Winthrop 1901 Marion, S. C.
History, Sociology
Moon, Evangeline Ada, A.B. Normal 1906 New York City
Geology
Moore, Justin Hartley, A.M. 1904, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 New York City
Indo-Iranian
Morgan, Charlotte Elizabeth New York City
A.B. 1904, A.M. 1905, A.M. Radcliffe 1906
English
Morrey, William Thomas, A.B. Ohio State 1888, A.M. N. Y. U. 1893- -New York City
Economics
Morris, Dave Hennen, A.B. Harvard 1896, LL.B. N. Y. Law 1901. . . .New York City
History
Morris, Frederick Kuhne, B.S. C.C.N.Y. 1904 New York City
Geology
Morris, May Josephine, A. B. Normal 1902 New York City
Geology
Mortimer, Albert Skelly, A.B. St. Francis Xavier 1907 New York City
Economics
Mosher, Joseph Albert Millerton, Penn.
A.M. 1907, Ph.B. Syracuse 1905, Ph.M. 1906
English, Comparative Literature
AND PURE SCIENCE 277
Mullen, Loring Blanchard, Ph.D. Wooster 1898 New York City
Mathematics
Munson, Daniel Gilbert, A.B. Colby 1892, A.M. 189s New York City
English
Murai, Yutaro, A.B. Waseda 1901 Tokyo, Japan
Sociology, Social Economy
Murray. Jennie Erskine, B.S. 1907 New York City
English, History
Murray, William Smith, B.S. Syracuse 1888, M.S. 1892 Bath, N. Y.
History, Comparative Literature
Nail, Elizabeth, B.L. Mary Nash (Tex.) 1897 Fort Worth, Tex.
English
Nammack, Elizabeth Frances, A.B. 1895, A. M. 1896 New Rochelle, N. Y.
Latin
Nasmith, Augustus Inglesbe, A.B. Colgate 1904 Canton, N. Y.
Chinese
Nearing, Elena, B.S. Cornell 1896 Middletown, N. Y.
Germanic
Neilson, John Larchmont, N. Y.
Astronomy
Nelms, William Stockton, A.B. Southwestern 1903, A.M. 1904 Waco, Tex.
Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics
Nelson, Aubrey Percy, A.M. 1904, A.B. Chicago 1902 New York City
Philosophy
Nelson, Christian Godfred, A.B. St. Olaf 1906 Lanesboro, Minn
History, Semitics
Neumann, Henry, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1900, Ph.D. N. Y. U. 1906 New York City
English, Education
New, Francis Dillon, A. B. Seton Hall 1894, A.M. 1896 New Brunswick, N. J.
Romance, Education
Newman, Joseph, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1897, M.S. N. Y. U. 1900 New York City
Cfiemisiry
Newton, Mary Leslie, A.B. Tennessee 1898 Ooltewah, Tenn.
Latin, Greek
Xifenecker, Eugene A., A.M. 1906, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1901 New York City
History
Nishimoto, Itsuzo, A.B. Waseda 1904 Tokyo, Japan
International Law, Constitutional Law, Economics
Nixon, Lillian Edith, A.B. Minnesota 1903, A.M. 1906 Pembina, N. D.
English
Noble, William Corkran, A.B. Syracuse 1902 Madison, N. J.
Sociology, English
Norris, Etheldreda Lord, A.B. George Washington 1899 Bayonne, N. J.
History
Norris, John Sewards, Ph.B. Ohio State 1901, A.M. 1902 New York City
Philosophy
Noyes, Anna Gausmann, B.S. 1906 New York City
Sociology
Odencrantz, Louise Christine, A.B. 1907 New York City
Economics, Social Economy, History
O'Donnell, Patrick Joseph New York City
B.D. and B.C.L. Maynooth College, Ireland, 1901
Psychology
Oesterlein, Charlotte Rose, A.B. 1907 New York City
Philosophy, History
Ogden, Charles Jones, A.B. 1900, LL.B. and A.M. 1903 New York City
Greek, Latin, Indo-Iranian
278 POLITICAL SCIEXCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Oliphant, John, Grad. Nashotah Sem. 1902 New York City
Philosophy, English
Opdyke, Agnes, A.B. Radcliffe 1904 New York City
Social Economy, Romance
Orvis, Edna May, A.B. Wellesley 1905 Manchester, Vt.
Philosophy, Psychology
Osborne, James Insley, A.B. Wabash 1906, A.M. 1907 Crawfordsville, Ind.
English, Comparative Literature
Oshima, Chicasada, A.B. Waseda 1903 Tokyo, Japan
Economics, Sociology, International Law
Paddock, Bernard Horace, A.B. California 1904 San Francisco, Cal.
Philosophy, Anthropology
Palmblad, Harry Victor Emmanuel, A.B. 1907 New York City
English, Latin
Palmer, John Henry New York City
English
Panaroni, Alfred, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
Romance, English
Patterson, Frank Allen, A.M. 1907, A.B. Syracuse 1904. ...East Bloomfield, N. Y.
English, Comparative Literature
Patterson, Frank Melvin, A.B. Waynesburg 1905 Carmichaels, Penn.
Sociology
Patterson, Shirley Gale, A.B. Amherst 1906 New York City
Romance
Patton, Julia, A.B. Oberlin 1895 Mount Vernon, la.
English, Comparative Literature
Paul, Harry G., A.B. Michigan 1897, A.M. Chicago 1901 Urbana, 111.
English
Payne, Fernandus, A.B. Indiana 1905, A.M. 1906 Fairland, Ind.
Zoology, Botany
Pearl, Joseph, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Latin, Greek
Pearson, Philip Coombs, B.S. Mass. Inst, of Tech. 1902 Newburyport, Mass.
Sociology, Philosophy
Peiser, Delwyn Walter, A.B. 1907 New York City
English
Percival, Harold Spencer, A.M. 1906, A.B. Stanford 1903. . . .Prince Edward Island
Philosophy
Perkins, Elizabeth Mary, A.C. Bryn Mawr 1900, Ph.D. 1903. ...Washington, D. C.
Latin
Perrier, Joseph Louis New York City
A.M. 1906, equiv. A.B. University de Montpellier 1892, A.M. St.
Francis Xavier 1905
Philosophy
Perry, Edna Maude, A.B. Mt. Holyoke 1904 Belfast, N. Y.
English, Comparative Literature
Perry, William Frederick Independence, Mo.
B.S. Stuartsville 1886, A.B. Missouri Valley 1892, B.D. Lebanon 1896
Sociology
Persons, William Frank New York City
Ph.B. Cornell 1900, LL.B. Harvard 1905
Social Economy
Peterson, Arthur Everett, A.B. Tufts 1892, A.M. 1897 New York City
History
Peterson, William Harold, B.S. Wesleyan 1907 Pine Bush, N. Y.
Chemistry
AND PURE SCIENCE 279
Pettit, Anna Frances Thompson, A.B. Swarthmore 1907 Philadelphia, Pcnn .
English, Comparative Literature
Pettit. William Smith, A.B. Williams 1905 Canajoharie, N. Y.
Philosophy
Philp, Mary Isabel, A.M. 190s. Ph.B. Syracuse 1901 Chateaugay, N. Y.
Philosophy
Pignol, Gertrude A.M., B.S. 1904 New York City
Germanic, French
Plaskett, George Marshal New York City
Anthropology
Points, Juliet Stuart, A.B. 1907 Jersey City, N. J.
History
Pomerene, Jennie, A.M. 1904, A.B. Vassar 1886 Poughkeepsic, N.Y.
French
Pomeroy, Annie Louise, B.L. Mt. Holyoke 1896 Springfield, Mass.
English
Poole, Katherine Ellen, A.B. 1903 Faribault, Minn.
Botany
Porter, George Henry, Ph.B. Ohio State 1901 New Philadelphia, Ohio
History, Constitutional Law
Powell, Harry Wheeler, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1883 New York City
Mathematics
Powell, Thomas Reed Burlington, Vt.
A.B. Vermont 1900, LL.B. Harvard 1904
Constitutional Law, Political Philosophy, History
Pratt, Edward Ewing Oberlin, Ohio
A.B. Oberlin 1906, A.M. Tulane 1907
Economics, Social Economy, Constitutional Law
Pratt, Marion, A.B. Cornell 1900, A.M. Syracuse 1902 Syracuse, N. Y.
Latin
Price, William Raleigh, A.B. Cornell 1898 New York City
Romance, Germanic
Pride, Ora Lee Cincinnati, Ohio
A.B. Antioch 1905, A.M. Cincinnati 1907, Grad. Lane Theol. Sem. 1907
Philosophy, History
Purves, Elinor Kennedy, A.B. Smith 1904 Princeton, N. J.
History
Quackenbos, George Payn, A.B. 1900, A.M. 1901 New York City
Indo-Iranian
Rabinowitz, Benjamin M New York City
Zoology, Physiology
Rabinowitz, Elias Nathan, A.B. Haverford 1903 Philadelphia, Penn.
Semitics, Economics
Radin, Max, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1899, LL.B. N. Y. U. 1902 New York City
Classical Archaeology
Radin, Paul, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
Anthropology, Psychology
Rand, Albert Edward, A.B. Amherst 1907 Providence, R. I.
Germanic, French
Randolph, Joseph Drane, A.B. Kentucky 1904 Slaughtersville, Ky.
Sociology
Raschen, John Frederick Louis Easton, Penn.
A.B. German Wallace 1895, A.M. Lafayette 1906
Germanic
Raucher, Joachim Ben Zion, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Germanic
Ray, Jackson Harvelle Randolph Madison, Miss.
A.B. Emory and Henry 1905
English
280 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Reber, John, A.M. 1905, A.B. Seton Hall 1903 West New York, N. J.
Germanic, English
Redding, Helen Edmunds, A.B. Adelphi 1901 New York City
History
Redmond, Daniel Walter, Ph.B. Hamilton 1901 New York City
Economics, Administrative Law
Reed, Albert Franklin, A.B. Harvard 1904, A.M. 1905 Waltham, Mass.
Latin
Reed, Alfred Zontzinger, A.B. Harvard 1897, A.M. 1898 New York City
Constitutional Law, Political Philosophy
Reiley, Katharine Campbell, A.M. 1900, A.B. Vassar 1891 New York City
Latin
Reilly, Joseph John, A.B. Holy Cross 1904, A.M. 1906 Springfield, Mass.
English
Reiner, John Louis, A.B. Pennsylvania 1906 Little Britain, N. Y.
Jurisprudence
Riddell, Walter A., A.B. Manitoba 1907 Minto, Man., Canada
Sociology
Riley, Isaac Woodbridge, A.B. Yale 1892, A.M. 1898, Ph.D. 1902. .Montrose, Penn.
Philosophy
Ristine, Frank Humphrey Crawfordsville, Ind.
A.M. 1907, A.B. Wabash 1905, A.M. 1906
English, Comparative Literature
Roberts, Charles McGibney, Ph.B. Kenyon 1906 Mt. Vernon, Ohio
International Law, Jurisprudence, Private Law
Roberts, Frederick William New York City
A.M. 1897, A.B. Vermont 1896, B.D. Cambridge 1900
Physiology
Robertson, Margaret Louise, A.B. Toronto 1894 Brampton, Ont., Canada
Mathematics
Robinson, Winifred Josephine Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
A.M. 1904, B.S. Michigan 1899
Botany, Biological Cliemistry
Rodman, Henrietta, B.S. 1903 New York City
Social Economy, English
Roelkey, David Ernest, A.B. St. John's 190s Frederick, Md.
Bacteriology, Biol. Chemistry
Roessler, Erwin William Eugene, A.B. Chicago 1900 New York City
Germanic
Rogoff, Harry, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Comparative Literature, Philosophy
Rosenbaum, Edwin Joseph, A.B. 1907 Portsmouth, Va.
Constitutional Law, International Law, Political Philosophy
Rosenblatt, Bernard Abraham, A.B. 1907 New York City
Sociology
Rosenblatt, Frank Ferdinand, A.B. 1907 New York City
Economics, Sociology, Philosophy
Rosenblatt, Max New York City
A.M. 1906, equiv. A.B. Bauer Gymnasium, Vienna, 1898
Germanic
Rosenthal, Daniel Crehange, A.B. Syracuse 1906, A.M. Yale 1907. .Syracuse, N. Y.
Romance, English
Rosinger, Samuel New York City
Semitics
Rounds, Walter Sleeper, A.B. Hiram 1900 New York City
Sociology, Economics
AND PURE SCIENCE 281
Rubenovitz, Herman Harry, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Scmitics, Philosophy, Sociology
Rushmore, Elsie Mitchell, A.B. Vassar 1906 New York City
History, Sociology
Ruutz-Rees, Caroline, L.L.A. St. Andrews, Scotland 1904 Greenwich, Conn.
Romance
Ryan, Will Carson, A.B. Harvard 1907 New York City
Germanic, Comparative Literature
Sachsse, Mrs. Dorothea Kotzschmar, B.L. Smith 1899 New York City
Germanic, English
Sackett, Nathan, Ph.B. Brown 1906 Providence, R. I.
Mathematics, Math. Physics, Philosophy
St. George, Hilda Caroline, A.B. Wellesley 1906 New York City
English, Comparative Literature
Sait, Edward McChesney, A.B. Toronto 1902, A.M 1903 . ...Oakville, Ont., Canada
Constitutional Law, International Law, History
Samuels, Abraham Bertram, A.B. 1907 New York City
English
Sargent, Arthur Hayes, A.B. Vermont 1904 Corinth, Vt.
Philosophy
Sato, Walter Tokyo, Japan
Economics, International Law
Saunders, Catharine, A.B. Elmira 1891 Belfast, N. Y.
Latin
Saxe, Bernhard David, A.M. 1903, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1S99 New York City
Philosophy
Saxton, Margaret Dunlap Edgewater, N. J.
A.M. 1906, Ph.B. Dickinson 1900, A.M. 1902
Germanic, English
Sayer, Lydia Ellison, A.B. Vassar 1907 Warwick, N. Y.
Social Economy, Sociology
Schellitzer, Max, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1 904 New York City
English
Schermerhorn, John Egmont, A.B. 1907 New York City
English, Comparative Literature
Schlauch, William Storb, B.S. Pennsylvania 1906 New York City
Mathonatics
Schneeberg, David, B.S. Pennsylvania 1907 New York City
Economics, Sociology, Philanthropy
Schottland, Joseph, A.M. 1907, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Philosophy, Psychology
Schreiber, William, A.B. 1907 New York City
English, Comparative Literature
Schultz, Gustav Frederick, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1907 New York City
English
Schuyler, Elmer, B.S. Lafayette 1897, M.S. 1900 New York City
Mathematics
Schwabe, Ida, B.S. 1905 New York City
Germanic
Schwartz, Louis Leon, LL.B. Minnesota 1907 Minneapolis, Minn.
International Law, Political Philosophy, English
Schwarz, Herbert Ferlando New York City
A.M. 1907, A.B. Harvard 1904, A.M. 1905
English, Comparative Literature
Schwarz, Osias, equiv. A.B. Bucharest 1897 Bucharest, Rumania
Psychology, Philosophy, Education
282 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,
Schwerin, Mrs. Nettie Pickard, B.S. 1904 New York City
Philosophy
Sears, Joseph Davis Bloomfield, N. J.
Social Economy, Jurisprudence
Seaton, Clare Maria, B.S. 1906 Richfield, Springs, N. Y.
Social Economy, English
Secor, Mabel Roberts, A.B. Michigan 1906 Arlington, N. J.
English
Selig. Samson, A.B. iqo6 Atlanta, Ga.
Constitutional Law, International Law, History
Seniza, Frances Catherine, B.S. 1903 Hoboken, N. J.
Physics
Seringhaus, Else Helen, A.B. Normal 1904 New York City
Botany
Shapiro, Louis Moses, B.S. C.C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Administrative Law
Shaver, Elmer Clifton, Grad. Princeton Theol. Sem. 1898 New York City
Social Economy
Sheldon, Addison Erwin, A.B. Nebraska 1902, A.M. 1904 Lincoln, Neb.
Sociology, Economics, Anthropology
Sheldon, (Mrs.) Margaret Thompson Lincoln, Neb.
B.S. Doane 1886, A.M. Nebraska 1897
English
Shenton, Herbert N., Ph.B. Dickinson 1906 Madison, N. J.
Sociology, Social Economy
Sherrer, Frank Lester, A.B. Lafayette 1907 East Orange, N. J.
Constitutional Law, Jurisprudence
Shiartag, Bernard Lloyd, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Constitutional Law, Administrative Law, Economics
Silberberg, Berenice, B.S. Purdue 1905, M.S. 1907 New York City
Botany
Simmonds, Lionel Julius, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 New York City
Psychology
Simms, Florence, Ph.B. DePauw 1895 Mattoon, 111.
Sociology, Economics
Simpson, Ely, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Constitutional Law
Sitterly, Erwin Franklin Madison, N. J.
A.B. Southwest Kansas 1904, B.D. Drew 1907
English
Slater, Florence Wells, B.S. Cornell 1900 Winston-Salem, N. C.
Zoology
Small, John E. Gratten, Grad. Princeton Theol. Sem. 1907 New York City
Psychology, Education
Smith, Florence Mary, A.B. Illinois 1899, A.M. 1906 Gillman, 111.
English, Education
Smith, Franklin Haus New York City
A.B. Texas 1900, A.M. 1901 and Harvard 1904
Mathematics
Smith, Gilbert Harmer, A.B. Trinity (N. C.) 1904 Newton, N. C.
Sociology
Smith, James Hardin, B.S. Hiwassee 1900, B.D. Cumberland 1906. . . .Concord, Tenn.
Sociology
Smith, Louise, A.B. Smith 1897 New York City
Latin, Greek
Smith, Roy Leslie, A.B. Fort Worth 1903 New York City
Greek, Semitics
AND PURE SCIENCE 283
Smith, William Mackky, Ph.B. Lafayette 1903 Easton, Penn.
Mathematics, Astronomy
Snow, Charles Wilhert, A.B. Bowdoin 1907 Spruce Head, Maine
English
Solomon, Michael, A.B. 1907 New York City
Latin, Greek, Education
Spaulding, Leila Clement, A.M. 1901, A.B. Vassar 1899 New York City
Classical Archcrology, Greek
Spear, Joseph David, equiv. A.B. Seminar Cassel, Germany 1900 New York City
Philosophy, Psychology, Comparative Literature
Spitz. Edward Frederick, A.B. 1906, A.M. 1907 New York City
Sociology, Constitutional Law
Spooner, Georgina Brackenbridge, A.B. Vassar 1907 Orange, N. J.
Zoology, Physiology.
Springer, Ada, B.S. 1906, A.M. 1907 East Las Vegas, N. M.
Zoology
Squire, William Lord, A.B. Yale 1906 Meriden, Conn.
English
Staber, Hilda, A.B. 1905 New York City
English, Comparative Literature, Philosophy
Stair, Bird Williams, B.S. Purdue 1899, M-s- 19°I Buck Creek, Ind.
English
Stauffer, Vernon, A.B. Hiram 1901 Angola, Ind.
English, Sociology
Stearns, Anna Prentiss, A.B. Vassar 1904 Bangor, Me.
English
Stearns, Stella Burger, A.B. Minnesota 1892, A.M. Chicago 1906. . . .Duluth, Minn.
English
Steinman, David Bernard, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Physics, Mathematics
Steitz, August, A.B. N. Y. U. 1905, A.M. Yale 1906 New York City
Germanic
Stevenson, Reston, A.B. North Carolina 1902, A.M. 1903 Wilmington, N. C.
Chemistry
Stewart, Wood Robert, A.B. Rollins 1902, B.D. Cambridge 1905. .New York City
Sociology, History
Streeter, Stella Georgiana, A.M. 1904, B.L. Smith 1898. . . .Cummington, Mass.
Zoology
Streubel, Ernest John, A.B. Bklyn Polytechnic 1905, A.M. 1906.. .New York City
Germanic
Suzuki, Yoshimitsu, A.B. Williams 1907 Omi, Japan
Philosophy, Sociology, Social Economy
Takasugi, Yoshihiro, A.B. DePauw 1906 Hirosaki, Japan
International Law, Political Philosophy, Economics
Tamraz, Eishoo, equiv. A.B. Urmiah 1902 Urmiah, Persia
Turkish
Tanzer, Helen H., A.B. 1903 New York City
Latin, Greek
Tate, Willis Alexander Delaney, A.B. Howard 1907 Jackson, Miss.
Philosophy
Taylor, Charles Edward, A.M. 1907, B.S. Case 1906 Penn Yan, N. Y.
Chemistry
Taylor, Helen Grey, A.B. Vassar 1907 Hawthorne, N. Y.
Zoology, Physiology, Education
Taylor, Jeanette Stuart, A.B. Vassar 1904 New York City
English
284 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY
Taylor, M. O. (Mrs. H. C.) New York City
Comparative Literature
Taylor, Rupert, A.B. Arkansas 1903, A.M. 1906 Jonesboro, Ark.
English, Comparative Literature
Thomas, Arthur George, A.B. Chicago 1903 Sioux City, la.
International Law, Constitutional Law, History
Thomas, David, A.B. Ripon 1906 Wales, Wis.
Sociology, Social Economy
Thomas, David, A.B. Dartmouth 1907 Neath, Penn.
Sociology
Thompson, Clara Mildred, A.M. 1907, A.B. Vassar 1903 Atlanta, Ga.
History, Sociology
Thompson, Martha, A.B. 1905 Ridgefield, N. J.
Zoology
Thompson, Newton Yonkers, N. Y.
Sociology, Economics
Thomssen, Edgar George, B.S. 1907 Rochester, N. Y.
Chemistry
Tilney, Frederick, A.B. Yale 1897, M.D. L. I. Coll. Hosp. 1903 New York City
Histology, Embryology, Anatomy
Titsworth, Susan Sayer, A.M. 1903, A.B. Smith 1897 Milwaukee, Wis.
History
Todd, Joseph Clinton, A.B. Missouri Valley 1901 Brentwood, N. Y.
Sociology, Economics, History
Tompkins, Nanna May, A.M. 1907, A.B. Vassar 1894 Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
History, Sociology
Tripp, Myron Owen, A.B. Indiana 1901 Yonkers, N. Y.
Mathematics, Math. Physics
Trosk, Charles, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
English
Trowbridge, Cornelia Rogers, A.B. Smith, 1891 New York City
Greek
Truesdell, Waldo Bromley, A.B. Harvard 1897 New York City
Physics, Mathematics
Turner, John Pickett, A.B. Vanderbilt 1900, A.M. 1901 Nashville, Tenn.
Philosophy, Psychology
Turner, Julia Emery, A.B. Vassar 1895 Quincy, 111.
English
Tyler, Sarah Emily, A.B. Vassar 1906 New York City
Latin, Greek
Tynan, Joseph Lawrence, A.M. 1907, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1901 New York City
English
Ulrich, Charlotte Arlington, A.B. Adelphi 1907 New York City
Germanic
Underwood, Elizabeth Scofield, A.B. Smith 1892 New York City
Social Economy
von Unwerth, Frida, Ph.B. Chicago 1903 New York City
Germanic
Uyematsu, Yuichiro, equiv. A.B.Waseda 1904 Tokyo, Japan
International Law, Economics
Vanderburgh, Frederick Augustus, A.B. Rochester 1876 New York City
Semitics
Van Nuys, Claude Cornelius Flandreau, S. D.
B.S. Yankton 1901 and S. D. School of Mines 1907
Mathematics, Physics, Philosophy
Vam Zandt, Philip George, A.B. Chicago 1907 Chicago, 111.
Philosophy
AND PURE SCIENCE 285
Varner, Calla Edington, A.B. Missouri 1904 • Union Star, Mo.
History, Economics
Vaughn, Harvey Penn, A.B. Southern 1904 Pratt City, Ala.
Sociology
Vazakas, Alexander Aristidis, A.B. N. Y. U. 1904 New York City
Philosophy
Ventres, Adelaide Brainerd, A.B. Smith 1888 Bloomfield, N. J.
Latin, Greek
Vexler, Felicin, equiv. A.B. Lyceum, Bucharest, 1907 New York City
Philosophy. Psychology
Vineberg, Solomon, A.B. McGill 1906 Montreal, Canada
Economics, Sociology, History
Wallin, Axel Reynold, A.B. Augustana 1902, A.M. 1907 Kenilworth, N. J.
Latin, Greek
Walton, Joseph Barnard, A.B. Pennsylvania 1905 George School, Pa.
Social Economy, Economics
Ware, Edith Ellen, A.B. Woman's College Baltimore 1905 Baltimore, Md.
History, Education
Wassam, Clarence Wycliffe, Ph.B. Iowa 1903, A.M. 1904 Iowa City, la.
Social Economy, Economics
Wears, Mabel Clare, A.B. Kentucky 1907 Paducah, Ky.
History, Sociology
Webb, Harold Worthington, A.B. 1905 Glen Ridge, N. J.
Physics, Math. Physics
Weisman, Charles, B. S. C. C. N. Y. 1900, M.S. N. Y. U. 1902 New York City
Chemistry
Weld, Louis Dwight Harvell, A.B. Bowdoin 1905, A.M. Ills. 1907 . .Hyde Park, Mass.
Economics, Sociology, Political Philosophy
Welles, Frank Corday, A.B. 1907 New York City
International Law, Constitutional Law, Economics
Wendel, Carrie Elizabeth, A.B. Adelphi 1907 New York City
Latin
White, Frederick Carleton, A.B. Alfred 189s, A.M. 1902 New York City
History
White, Winton John, A.B. Pennsylvania 1904, A.M. 1905 Englewood, N. J.
Latin
Whiteside, Donald Grant, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1897. A.M. N. Y.U. igoi.New York City
Germanic
Whitford, Edward Everett, A.B. Colgate 1886, A.M. 1890 Brookfield, N. Y.
Mathematics
Whitmore, Clarence Willard, A.B. George Washington 1906. .Washington, D. C.
Sociology, Social Economy
Wickham, Joseph Francis, A.B. Holy Cross 1904 South Lee, Mass.
English, Comparative Literature
Wickham, Ray Emery, E.M. North Dakota 1907 Glen Ullin, N. D.
Metallurgy, Mining, Geology
Wilcox, Ethel Dodge, A.B. 1903, A.M. 1905 Pelham Manor, N. Y.
Sociology
Wilcox, Willis Hamel, Ph.B. Michigan 1896, Ph.M. 1898 East Stroudsburg, Pa.
English
Wilder, George Fay, A.B. St. Lawrence 1907 New York City
Mathematics
Willard, Gladys, A.B. Cornell 1898 New York City
Latin
Williams, Anna Wessels, M.D. Woman's Medical 1891 New York City
Zoology
286 POLITICAL SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY, ETC.
Williams, Blanche Colton Shrock, Miss.
A.B. Woman's State College (Miss.) 1898
English, Education
Williams, Charles Laidlaw, A.B. 1906 East Orange, N. J.
ConsHtutional Law, Administrative Law, Economics
Williams, Eric Johann, A.B. Harvard 1906 Lockport, N. Y.
Constitutional Law
Williams, M. Emma, Ph.B. Wesleyan 1899 New York City
English, Latin
Wilson, Warren H., A.B. Oberlin 1890, A.M. 1894 New York City
Economics
Wing, David Laforest, B.S. Mass. Inst. Tech. 1898 Bangor, Me.
Sociology
Wise, Byrd Douglas, A.B. 1907 New York City
Constitutional Law, International Law, History
Wood, Elvira Waltham, Mass.
Geology, Zoology
Woodman, Leon Elmer, A.B. Dartmouth 1899, A.M. 1902 Claremont, N. H.
Physics
Woodroofe, Robert William, A.B. Toronto 1902, A.M.King's 1904. New York City
History
Wormser, I. Maurice, A.B. 1906 New York City
History
Wright, Ernest Hunter, A.B. 1905, A.M. 1907 New York City
English, Comparative Literature
Wye, Theodora Ethel, B.S. 1907 New York City
Latin
Yokota, Seimatsu, equiv. A.B. Waseda 1903 Tokyo, Japan
Economics, Sociology, Political Philosophy
Zandstra, Sidney, A.B. Hope 1903, B.D. Princeton Theol. 1907 Chicago, 111.
Semitic s
Zeitlin, Jacob, A.B. 1904, A.M. 1905 Urbana, 111.
English
Zirulick, Hyman, B.S. Missouri School of Mines 1907 Minsk, Russia
Civil Engineering, Math. Physics
In addition to the above 715 candidates for the degree of master of arts or doctor
of philosophy, 182 are registered under the faculty of philosophy with education as
their major subject. The names of these candidates appear in the list of graduate
students under Teachers College. (See page 332.)
SUMMARY
Students Primarily Registered under these Faculties . . . .897
Students from other Faculties of the University, Candi-
dates for the Degree of A.M., LL.M., or Ph.D.:
From the School of Law 31
From the Schools of Mines, Engineering, and Chem-
istry 4
Grand Total 932
One hundred and seventy-one students matriculated under the faculties of Political
Science, Philosophy, or Pure Science attended the summer session of 1907, but did not
register for the first term of the academic year 1907-08.
FACULTY OF FINE ARTS
Schools of Architecture, Music, and Design
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D. (Cantab.), Litt.D. (Oxon.)
President of the University
Alfred D. F. Hamlin, A.M.. .Professor of the History of Architecture
Frank Dempster Sherman, Ph.B Professor of Graphics
James Rignall Wheeler, Ph.D Professor of Greek Archceology
and Art, and Acting Dean
Clarence H. Young, Ph.D Professor of Greek
Charles Hubert Farnsworth Adjunct Professor of Music in Teachers
College
Friedrich Hirth, Ph.D Dean Lung Professor of Chinese
Leonard Beecher McWhood, A.B Adjunct Professor of Music
Joel Elias Spingarn, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Comparative
Literature
Maximilian K. Kress, A.M Adjunct Professor of Architecture,
and Secretary
George N. Olcott, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Latin
Jefferson B. Fletcher, A.M Professor of Comparative Literature
Cornelius Rubner Professor of Music
Arthur Wesley Dow. . . .Professor of Fine Arts in Teachers College
James T. Shotwell, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of History
Charles F. McKim, Litt.D Director of Atelier
Thomas Hastings, Diplom6 E.D.B.-A Director of Atelier
Frederick Dielman. . . .President of the National Academy of Design
Sir Caspar Purdon Clarke . Director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Edward Robinson, A.B., LL.D Assistant Director of the Metro-
politan Museum of Art
Edward R. Smith, A.B Reference Librarian, Avery Architectural
Library
Charles A. Harriman Instructor in Architecture
Charles P. Warren, A.M Instructor in Architecture
William Adams Delano, A.B Associate Director of Atelier
John V. Van Pelt, Diplome E.D.B.-A. . .Associate Director of Atelier
Harvey W. Corbett, B.S Associate Director of Atelier
Francis A. Nelson, B.S Lecturer in Architecture
2S7
288 FACULTY OF FINE ARTS
Standing Committees
On the Program of Studies: The Acting Dean (Chairman); Pro-
fessors Hamlin, McWhood, Dow, and Dielman.
On Admissions: Professors Hamlin (Chairman); McWhood and
Dielman.
On Scholarships: The Acting Dean (Chairman); Professors Sherman
and Riibner.
General Statement
The Faculty of Fine Arts, established March 5, 1906, comprises three
separately organized schools, of Architecture, of Music, and of Design.
Work in Architecture and in Music is no new thing at the University,
since a department in the former subject has existed for about twenty-
six years and in the latter about eleven years. On the other hand,
until 1906, there has been no attempt to make any systematic provision
for the needs of university students who seek opportunities in the
study of painting, sculpture, and decoration, and it is by the creation
of a School of Design in co-operation with the National Academy of
Design that the University hopes in time to afford such opportunities.
The establishment of this new school, as yet only tentative in its
organization, has been made possible by an agreement between the
Academy and the University on January 12, 1906. By such agree-
ment the Art Schools of the Academy became closely associated with
the University. They remain, however, entirely under the direction
of the Academy, which preserves the independence secured to it by its
own separate corporate existence.
It is not the purpose of the University to develop courses in the
School of Design in the direction of technique and practice; this side
of the student's training must remain mainly in the hands of those who
conduct the work of the Academy of Design; but it does hope, by the
gradual establishment of instruction and study in the history of art
and in aesthetic theory, to offer adequate training for the investigation
of the problems which the artistic development of mankind suggests,
to help the professional artist to a fuller realization of the human
ideals which should form the background of his endeavor, and finally
to lead its students in other departments to perceive the importance
of the fine arts in any scheme of liberal culture.
Neither the University nor the Academy has at present at its dis-
posal adequate resources to develop a complete system of instruction
in the School of Design. A beginning, however, as set forth below
(p. 297), has been made, and the University looks forward to the
possibility at no remote time of an adequate equipment for the new
School.
A statement of the work offered by the Academy of Design will
be found on page 297.
ADMISSION 289
For details as to the advantages which the City of New York offers
outside of the University and the Academy for the study of the
fine arts, and as to the public lectures, exhibitions, and recitals main-
tained by the University in addition to the regular academic pro-
gram, the separately printed Announcement of the Faculty of Fine
Arts should be consulted. Those interested should also consult
the Announcement of the Summer Session and Extension Teaching.
Admission
Except by special action of the Committee on Admissions, students
under eighteeen are not admitted. For the general admission
regulations see page 154, and for the special regulations for the
course for the bachelor's degree in Architecture and for the Certificate
in Architecture, see page 290; for that in Bachelor in Music and for
the Certificate in Music see page 295; and for the Certificate of
Proficiency in Design see page 297.
To Advanced Standing
Students desiring credit for courses pursued elsewhere must file
a written application with the chairman of the Committee on
Admissions on or before September 8, 1908, to reach him at least
sixteen days before the University opens. The general regulations
as to documents to be submitted and as to the acceptance of certificates
are the same as for the Schools of Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry
(see page 225).
Non-matriculated Students
The Committee on Admissions may admit students of mature
age who are not candidates for a degree or certificate to such courses
as they may be qualified to pursue. The special qualifications deemed
necessary in each school for admission as a non-matriculated student
are:
In Architecture, a practical knowledge of architectural drawing
of the five orders, and of shades and shadows, is required for the
course in Architectural Design, and mathematics through plane
trigonometry for the Mathematical and Architectural Engineering
branches.
In Music, proficiency is determined by personal conference with
some officer of the School.
In Design, students in the National Academy of Design and such
other persons as have had adequate training and experience either
in the history and theory or in the practice of the fine arts are ad-
mitted under this provision.
Non-matriculated students will be permitted to matriculate at any
time upon fulfilling the stated entrance requirements, or they may be
290 FACULTY OF FINE ARTS
excused from these requirements upon the basis of specially dis-
tinguished excellence in their work as certified by vote of the
Faculty.
Fees
(See page 27)
Fellowships and Scholarships
(See pages 391 and 409)
Examinations
Regular examinations in each course are held at the end of each
half-year. All other examinations, except examinations for admission
to advanced standing, are special examinations, for which the statutory
fee of $5 is charged (see page 28). The dates of such examinations
for students debarred or deficient at the regular examinations will be
found in the academic calendar. Absence from any regular or delin-
quent examination for which a student is registered is regarded as a
failure.
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
General Statement
The School of Architecture of Columbia University is a professional
school for men, designed to train its graduates for the active practice
of architecture. Founded in 1881, under the direction of Professor
William R. Ware, as a department of the School of Mines (now the
Faculty of Applied Science), it was in 1902 made an independent
School. There are two regular courses in Architecture, one leading
to the degree of Bachelor of Architecture, and the other leading to a
Professional Certificate in Architecture.
The equipment of the school consists of about 18,000 photographs
and 800 books, chiefly the gift of Mr. F. A. Schermerhorn ; a classified
library of many thousands of prints and plates ; a collection of manu-
script drawings from the Ecole des Beaux- Arts and other sources ;
about 9000 lantern-slides of architectural subjects; a collection of casts
of architectural details, including a large number from ancient and
modern Roman buildings, the gift of Mr. Charles F. McKim; and an
architectural museum containing a collection of models, building
stones, tools, and materials. The Avery Architectural Library of
1 8,ooo volumes is the richest collection of works on architecture and
allied arts in the country.
Lectures to students of architecture on scientific subjects allied to
architecture are given in the Department of Physics, and the labora-
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE 29 1
tories of the Schools of Engineering offer unexcelled opportunities to
advanced students in architectural engineering.
The Willard collection of architectural casts and models in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art is open to students every day and two
evenings in the week. Buildings and building operations of great
value and interest are always within reach, and visits and excursions
during the second half of each year furnish specific opportunities for
profiting by them.
Admission
(For general regulations see page 154.)
To Candidacy for the Degree of Bachelor of Architecture
Candidates must have completed the equivalent of two years of
study in some recognized college or scientific school. This prelimi-
nary training must include elementary French and some time may be
saved by the anticipation of courses in mathematics; professional
courses in architecture, however, may not be counted a part of such
study, the purpose of which is to supplement, not to anticipate, the
professional course offered by this School.
Candidates must also show a practical knowledge of the orders of
architecture, of elementary projections and shades and shadows, of the
elements of architectural rendering, and of freehand drawing.
To the Course for the Certificate
Candidates for the Certificate must offer at the entrance examina-
tions (see page 154) subjects amounting to ten points, as indicated
below :
POINTS.
Drawing 1
Elementary Mathematics 3
and six points from the following subjects:
POINTS.
Chemistry ' 1
Elementary Physics • 1
Elementary History 2
English 3
Advanced Mathematics » 1
Elementary French ' 2
Elementary German ' 2
Elementary Latin 2
Spanish 2
1 Students deficient in these subjects are advised to consult the announcement of
the Summer Session of Columbia University, which will be sent upon application to
the Secretary of the University.
292 FACULTY OF FINE ARTS
Beginning with the year 1 908-09 not more than four points may be
offered in foreign languages, one of which must be French. In ad-
dition, candidates for admission to the course for the Certificate must
give evidence of the same practical knowledge as is required of can-
didates for the Degree.
Students from Other Institutions
Male students of any incorporated "school of art in New York
City and duly accredited students from the ateliers of the Society of
Beaux-Arts Architects of this city may be admitted, upon payment
of the prescribed fees, to the courses in the Elements of Architecture,
Projections and Shades and Shadows, Perspective, Descriptive
Geometry, Theory, the History of Architecture, and the History of
Ornament (Courses 1, 5, 6, 7-8, 21-22, 23-24, 25-26, 31-32, 33-34.
35-36, StS*' 53. 54. and 55; see list upon page 46).
Program of Studies
For the Degree of Bachelor of Science in Architecture
The course outlined below is of indeterminate duration. Students
of fair ability and thorough preparation should be able to complete
it in four years. Entering students should confer with the Executive
Head of the School, who will assist them in planning a definite schedule
suited to their qualifications and needs. The degree may be awarded
at the beginning of either half-year or at Commencement.
For a short statement of the scope of the following courses see
pages 41-153. A much fuller statement is contained in the Announce-
ment of the Faculty of Fine Arts, to be had upon application to the
Secretary of the University.
POINTS
1 History of Architecture (A. 21-22, 23-24. 25-26) 14
History of Ornament (A. 31-32, 33-34, 35-36) 6
French and German Reading (A. 41-42, 43~44) 8
Research 2
2 Mathematics (Math. 1, 2, 3-4, 5~6) l6
Mechanics (Mech. 21) 4
Architectural Engineering (A. 1 7-1 S) 10
3 Specifications (A. 1 1-12) 4
Building Materials (A. 13-14) 4
Office Drawings 2
4 Graphics (A. 5 ) 3
Perspective (A. 6) 3
Descriptive Geometry (A. 7) 3
Stereotomy (A. 8) 3
CERTIFICATE IN ARCHITECTURE 293
POINTS
5 Architectural Drawing (A. 3) 4
Elementary Drawing (A. 71-72) a
Modelling, Water-colors (A. 73-74) 2
Advanced Drawing (A. 75-76, 177-17S) 7
6 Theoryof Design (A. 51-52,53,54, 55) 5
Elements of Architecture (A. 1) 2
Applied Elements (A. 2) 4
Elementary and Intermediate Design (A. 61-62, 63-64) ... 15
Advanced Design (A. 1 61-162) 15
Thesis (A. 1 64) 3
Written Work (A. 24a, 260, 128a) 3
Summer Work (A. 72a, 74a, 76a) 6
Total required for graduation 150
The studies leading to these points may be pursued in any order
and combination desired, except that the mathematical subjects and
the three grades of Design must be taken in the prescribed sequence,
and that advanced drawing presupposes the more elementary branches.
No"student may take advanced design until he has completed 58
specified points (for details see the Announcement).
For the Certificate in Architecture
This course is intended to qualify the holder for general practice,
and for registry under the Architects' License Laws of Illinois, New
Jersey, and California. It omits the greater part of the mathematical
studies and applied mechanics required of candidates for the degree,
but includes simplified courses in Graphical Statics and Elementary
Engineering in their stead, and optional courses in Analytical Geome-
try and the Calculus, with special reference to graphical methods and
their usefulness in mechanics and engineering.
POINTS
1 History of Mediaeval and Modern Architecture (A. 23-24,
25-26) 8
History of Ornament (A. 31-32,33-34, 35-36) 6
Research 2
2 Elementary Structural Design (A. 1 5-16) 6
3 Specifications (A. 1 1-12) 4
Building Materials (A. 13-14) 4
Office Drawings 1
4 Graphics (A. 5) 3
Perspective (A. 6) 3
Descriptive Geometry (A. 7) 3
Stereotomy (A. 8) 3
294 FACULTY OF FINE ARTS
POINTS
5 Architectural Drawing (A. 3) 4
Elementary Drawing (A. 7 1-72 ) 2
Water-colors (A. 73 ) 1
Modelling (A. 74) 1
Pen Drawing and Drawing from Cast (A. 75-76) 3
Advanced Drawing (antique and from life) (A. 177-178) . . 4
6 Theoryof Design (A. 51-52, 53, 54, 55) 5
Elements of Architecture (A. 1) 2
Applied Elements (A. 2) 4
Elementary and Intermediate Design (A. 61-62, 63-64) ..15
Advanced Design (A. 1 61-162) 18
Thesis (A. 1 64) 3
Written Work (A. 24a, 26a, 128a) 3
Summer Work (A. 72a) 4
And in addition, to be selected from the following:
Ancient Architectural History (A. 21-22)
French and German Reading (A. 41-42, 43-44)
Graphical Analysis (A. 9-10 ) \ 6
Design (additional)
Drawing (additional)
114
The regulations as to the order and combination are the same as for
the candidates for the degree, except that only 32 points are required
as prerequisite to Advanced Design.
Architectural Engineering
In view of the increasing importance of engineering training in
certain classes of architectural work, adequate courses of instruction
are provided for those who desire to specialize in this direction.
Such students substitute for the Advanced Drawing and Advanced
Design an equivalent in engineering design, construction, and speci-
fications, by means of special problems and attendance upon certain
courses in the Department of Civil Engineering.
This course is open only to students who have completed the
architectural engineering of Course 17-18. A thesis is required as
the course in Design, consisting of a large problem of architectural
engineering worked out in full, with accompanying dissertation.
Graduate Courses
Candidates for the degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of Phil-
osophy may pursue in the School of Architecture the more advanced
studies of the course, which are accepted as major and minor subjects
under the regulations prescribed by the University Council for these
degrees. See page 164. The courses in Advanced Design, Engineering
SCHOOL OF MUSIC 295
and Practice (Architecture 1x3-1x4, 117-118, and 161-162) as well
as the graduate courses (213-214, 217-218, 227-228, and 261-262)
are accepted as major and minor subjects for these degrees.
Holders of the Certificate in Architecture are admitted to the
graduate course in Design with accompanying Research (A. 281-282,
227-228), but not to the graduate course in Construction (217-218)
except upon passing examinations upon all the prerequisite mathe-
matics and mechanics. They may not be candidates for the higher
degrees.
Graduates of this School, and of other schools of architecture of
like standing, who have had not less than one year of resident study
in Columbia University, may pursue their studies in Advanced Design
and Research in foreign schools of architecture, as candidates for the
higher degrees in Columbia University, upon programs issued by
this School.
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
General Statement
The Department of Music was established May 4, 1896, by means
of the Robert Center Fund for Instruction in Music, an endowment
presented to the University by the mother of the late Robert Center.
In 1906 a School of Music was established including both the de-
partment above mentioned and the department which had been
developed independently in Teachers College.
The aim of the instruction is to treat music historically and aestheti-
cally, as an element of liberal culture; to teach it scientifically and
technically, with a view to training musicians who shall be competent
to teach and to compose; to afford practical training of the ear by
means of rhythmic, melodic, and harmonic dictation; and to provide
practical training in choral and orchestral music. The several courses
have reference to the needs of the undergraduate, to those of the
university student wishing to specialize in music, and to those of
non-matriculated students of music — that is, students who are candi-
dates neither for a degree nor for a Certificate of Proficiency. Per-
formances of orchestral and choral music by the various organizations
under the direction of the School of Music are provided, from time
to time, for the members and friends of the University. There is,
also, an annual concert of original compositions by students in the
school. In addition, many public lectures, recitals, and concerts
of various kinds are held.
Equipment
A collection of music and of text-books is placed at the disposal of
students in the School. It includes the complete works of Palestrina,
Handel, Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Berlioz, Mendelssohn,
296 FACULTY OF FINE ARTS
Schumann, and Wagner, many orchestral and opera scores, the piano-
forte classics, chamber music, and vocal music, besides theoretical
works. The private library of the late Anton Seidl, recently presented
to the University, has been placed in the rooms of the School of
Music.
The School has a collection of orchestral instruments, for the use
of students taking part in the University orchestra. An Aeolian
Orchestrelle is employed for purposes of study and illustration.
There is, also, a large pipe organ in the University chapel.
Admission
For the general regulations governing all students under the Fac-
ulty of Fine Arts (see page 289).
To Candidacy for the Degree of Bachelor of Music
The requirements for admission to the course leading to the degree
of Bachelor of Music are: (1) The completion of courses of study in
Columbia College or Barnard College, amounting to a credit of sixty-
two points (substantially, two years' undergraduate study), or of
their equivalent elsewhere; (2) the ability to play, on the pianoforte,
the Two-Part Inventions of Bach.
To Candidacy for the Certificate of Proficiency
The requirements for admission to the course leading to a Certificate
of Proficiency in Music are: (1) The passing of examinations (see page
154) amounting to a credit of ten points, from among the follow-
ing subjects, English and one other language being required:
POINTS
English 3
Elementary Greek 3
Elementary Latin 2
Elementary French 2
Elementary German 2
Elementary Italian 2
Musical Appreciation 1
Harmony 1
Musical Performance 2
Elementary Mathematics 3
Elementary History 2
Elementary Physics *
Advanced Mathematics 1
Advanced History 1
(2) The ability to play, on the pianoforte, the Two-Part Inventions
of Bach.
Programs of Studies
The candidate for the degree of Bachelor of Music is expected to
SCHOOL OF DESIGN 297
pursue courses of study aggregating, at least, seventy-five points, as
follows :
a. (prescribed) All the courses in composition and criticism of-
fered by the School of Music; a year's course in each of the following:
language, literature, history, and the fine arts other than Music.
b. (elective) Other courses offered in the University, for which
the student has the necessary prerequisite, especially courses in
Musical Performance, ^Esthetics, Physics, or Psychology.
The candidate is further required to produce a satisfactory origi-
nal composition for orchestra or with orchestral accompaniment, and
to submit an essay on a musical subject.
The candidate for the Certificate of Proficiency is expected to fulfil
the same requirements as are demanded in the course leading to the
degree of Bachelor of Music (see above), except that only fifty points
of credit are required. The same requirement is made with regard to
the original composition and the thesis as in the case of a candidate
for the degree of Bachelor of Music.
SCHOOL OF DESIGN
The School of Design cannot yet offer a sufficiently complete series
of courses to warrant the granting of the degree of Bachelor of Design
which in due time it is the intention of the University to award to
properly qualified students. A Certificate in Design, however, is
provided for. Candidates for this certificate and non-matriculated
students who may wish to qualify for the degree, when it shall have
been established, may receive credit for such courses as they take and
may later count them toward the degree.
Equipment
The equipment includes, besides the resources of the Department
of Architecture and of the Avery Library already referred to, those
of the Department of Fine Arts of Teachers College, which occupies the
fourth floor of the Macy Building. Three large studios, with north
light, will each accommodate fifty students in drawing, design,
or painting. The modelling studio, in the basement of the main
building, will accommodate thirty students. The department has
recently received from Dr. Denman W. Ross, of Cambridge, Mas-
sachusetts, a gift of over three hundred pieces of textile, specially
chosen for design and color, and the College has acquired many choice
examples from the Drake collection of copper and brass. Beside these,
there is a large amount of material for. study and reference — casts,
still life objects, photographs and loan collections of textiles, books,
and Japanese prints.
Admission
For the general regulations as to admission see page 289.
298 FACULTY OF FINE ARTS
Every candidate for admission to the courses for the Certificate of
Proficiency in Design (Painting, Sculpture, or Decoration) is required:
(1) To pass entrance examinations (see page 154) counting 10
points, as indicated below. The candidate must offer:
POINTS
Drawing 1
French or German or Italian 2
English 3
and four points from the following subjects:
Elementary Mathematics 3
Advanced Mathematics > 1
Elementary Physics ' 1
Chemistry ' 1
Elementary History 2
Elementary Greek 3
or Elementary Latin 2
(2) To give evidence of a practical knowledge of the elementary
technique of work in India-ink and water-colors, and of proficiency in
sketching from the object and from simple plaster casts of ornament
or of the figure, in pencil or charcoal.
The certification of the National Academy of Design as to proficiency
in drawing is accepted for both the formal and the informal require-
ments in that subject.
Students of the National Academy of Design are admitted, upon
recommendation of the President of the Academy, as non-matriculated
students in the School of Fine Arts, to take such courses as they may
select, subject to the approval of the President of the Academy and
the Dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts.
Program of Studies for the Certificate of Proficiency
This course is intended to give the student, first, a broad outlook
upon the whole field of the fine arts, by an outline study of the theory,
criticism, and history of the arts in general; secondly, a more detailed
acquaintance with the history and principles of the particular branch
of the fine arts in which the student elects to specialize; and thirdly,
a sufficient amount and variety of technical training to qualify him
to pursue with success the particular branch of art which he has elected,
besides giving him some experience and understanding of the technical
processes and methods of expression of other forms of art. In view
of the great variety of purpose which may exist among students of
equal earnestness and intelligence, the curriculum has been made
somewhat flexible; so that, within defined limits, the relative pro-
1 Students found deficient in these subjects on examination are advised to consult
the Announcement of the Summer Session of Columbia University, which will be sent
upon application to the Secretary of the University.
SCHOOL OF DESIGN 299
portion of lecture work and research, on the one hand, and of studio
practice on the other, may be considerably varied. It should be
possible to complete the work for the certificate in about three years,
of which the first two years would be in large measure devoted to the
more general studies of the curriculum, and the last year to special
study and discipline in the particular field of painting, of sculpture,
or of decoration, as the student may elect. One hundred and fifteen
points are required for the certificate. Of these, 47 are assigned to
prescribed courses, from 10 to 25 to elective courses, and the balance
to work in the studio.
These 115 points may be acquired in any order and combination
which conforms to the necessary sequence of preliminary and advanced
subjects, each student registering for any number of courses he may
desire to take and for which he is qualified by previous training, and
paying for each course the required fee up to a maximum total of
$150 annually.
Program of Studies
The following courses aggregating 47 points are prescribed for all
candidates for the Certificate. Courses whose numbers are prefixed
with the initials N. A. are given by the National Academy of Design;
T. C. indicates that the course is given in Teachers College.
Detailed information as to these courses will be found in the separ-
ately printed Announcement of the Faculty of Fine Arts. The atten-
tion of students is also directed to the other courses in subjects
allied to the Fine Arts offered by the Departments of Philosophy, His-
tory, English, Latin, Greek, Germanic, Romance, Indo-Iranian and
Semitic Languages. (See pages 41 et. seq. of this volume.)
POINTS
Principles and Problems of ^Esthetics (Philosophy 142) ... . 3
General Course, Theory of Fine Arts (N. A. 1) 1
Art Appreciation and History (T. C, Fine Arts 53-54) . • • 4
Principles of Composition, a (T. C, Fine Arts 5-6) 10
Principles of Composition, b (T. C, Fine Arts 11-12) 4
Advanced Composition, Painting (T. C, Fine Arts 9-10) . . 9
(Or its equivalent in the National Academy of Design)
History of Art, Collateral Reading and Research (Fine
Arts 1-2) 4
History of Art, Advanced Reading and Research (Fine
Arts 101-102) 8
Pictorial Perspective (N. A. 5-6) 2
Artistic Anatomy (N. A. 7-8) 2
47
From ten to twenty points additional are to be acquired in elective
courses selected by the students, subject to the approval of the Dean
300 FACULTY OF FINE ARTS
and of the instructors giving the several courses. Courses counting
for not over 6 of these points may be selected in literature, language,
philosophy, science, or history, under the various faculties of the
University, subject to the regulations as to prerequisites for each
course. The remaining points (or the entire number if preferred) in
elective subjects are to be taken from the following list. Starred
courses are prescribed for students taking the course in Decoration,
and are given in the School of Architecture.
Elective Courses
POINTS
♦Elements of Architecture (i.) 2
Ancient Architectural History (21-22) 6
Mediaeval Architectural History (23-24) 4
Modern Architectural History (25-26) 4
♦Ancient Ornament (31-32) 2
Mediaeval Ornament (33-34) 2
♦Modern Ornament (35-36) 2
Theory of Planning and Composition (51-52) 2
♦Theory of Decorative Arts (53) 1
♦Theory of Color (54) *
♦Graphics (Projections, Shades and Shadows) (5). 3
♦Architectural Perspective (6) 3
Archaeology in French (41-42) 4
Design (T. C, F. A. 17-18) 6
General Musical Course (Music 1-2) 2
Analysis of Musical Sound (Music 5-6) 2
Musical Art (T. C. Music 7-8) 2
Chinese Civilization (Chinese 11) 2
Greek Vases and Painting (Greek 1 51-152) 4
Greek Sculpture (Greek 153-154) 4
Introduction to Comparative Literature (Comparative Lit-
erature 1-2) 6
Elements of Greek Archaeology (Greek 51-52) 4
Advanced Design and Interior Decoration (T. C, F. A.
1 9-2 o) 6
Studio Work
The candidate for the Certificate is further required to do work
in the studio by which he may obtain a credit of 43 to 58 points.
This requirement is based upon the supposition that the student can
meet it by an average, for each point, of one hour of studio work
per week through the academic year. This work is additional to
any studio work accompanying prescribed courses. The total number
of points to be obtained in studio work depends upon the amount
of elective work taken, the aggregate requirement for both classes of
SCHOOL OF DESIGN 301
work being in all cases 68 points, which added to the 47 points in
prescribed subjects make the total of 115 points required for the
Certificate.
The required studio work may be pursued in any one or more of
the three studios connected with the University — that of the National
Academy of Design at the corner of Amsterdam Avenue and 109th
Street, that of Teachers College, and that of the School of Architecture
— according as one may find in one or another the particular training
he most requires.
POINTS
Elementary Draftsmanship 4
(Proficiency in the elementary technique of the
pencil, charcoal, and brush, in black-and-white and
color.)
Elementary Oil Painting or Modelling 2- 4
(Drawing and painting from still-life are included
under the above two headings.)
Drawing from the antique 6- 8
Drawing from nature and from life 8-10
(Including landscape, animals, and figures.)
Advanced painting from landscape and from life )
Advanced modelling from life >• 10-14
Advanced decorative work from nature ;
Advanced composition (additional to prescribed course
on page 299) 5- S
(Separately in Painting, Sculpture, and Decoration.)
Original Design, Advanced 10-12
(Original work on specified programs, in Painting,
Sculpture and Decoration, with final thesis-exercise
accompanied by dissertation.)
45-60
Points not to exceed 4 in the aggregate may be granted for work
done in summer schools of Art, or during the summer upon a schedule
previously approved by Professor Dielman.
In general, except in the School of Architecture, the lecture courses
and research work are assigned to the afternoon hotirs, the morning
hours being left free for studio work. The collateral reading and
research, consisting of studies upon assigned topics in the history
of art, with accompanying sketches and written reports, may be
pursued in the Avery Architectural Library, the departmental libraries
of the Department of Fine Arts of Teachers College and of the School
of Architecture, and in the library and collections of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art.
REGISTER OF STUDENTS
Faculty of Fine Arts
School of Architecture
CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES
Acker, Jesse New York City
Albertson, "Wilbur Nicholas New York City
Almand, John Parks, B.S. Emory 1907 Lithonia, Ga.
Berg, Armand V Savannah, Ga.
Bermingham, Edward John New York City
Bernstein, Charles D New York City
Bissell, Cyrus Yale Jersey City, N. J.
Brainerd, Harry Beardslee New York Cityv
Brenner, Samuel New York City
Chapman, Frederick Burnham, A.B. Yale 1905 Auburn, N. Y.
Clark, Dana Louis Cleveland, O.
Clark, Joseph H., A.B. Yale, 190s New York City
Davis, Ellery Lothrop, A.B. Nebraska 1906 Lincoln, Neb.
Dudley, Ralph, B.S. Ala. Poly. Inst. 1905 Columbus, Ga.
Fudji, Gilbert Jacques New York City
Goldman, Harold New York City
Hawley, Graham New York City
Hentz, Harry Fitzgerald, Ph.B. Emory 1904 Oxford, Ga.
Hughes, Harry D Cleveland, Ohio
Jahelka, Robert New York City
Johnson, Folger, B.S. Georgia 1902 Upper Montclair, N. J.
Kahle, Herman New York City
Langmann, Otto Fred., A.B. Harvard 1906 New York City
Luithlen, William New York City
Markwitz, Abraham, B.S. Cooper Union 1906 New York City
Oberlander, Henry C New York City
Palliser, George Arthur New York City
Pond, Lester Munroe Hartford, Conn.
Pritz, Bessie, B.L. Nashville 1897 Nashville, Tenn.
Safier, Isador Edward Newark, N.J.
Smallwood, Robert Fleet, B.S. Davison 1906 New Berne, N. C.
Smythe, Richard Haviland New York City
Taylor, Edward Cray Los Angeles, Cal.
Trott, John Clinton New York City
Volz, Hans Carl Greenwich, Conn.
Way, Harold David, Ph.B Iowa 1907 Grinnell, la.
Weiher, Henry Albert New York City
Wescott, Jay V Los Angeles, Cal.
Yokoyama, Yasoshichiro Tokio, Japan
Total candidates for degree 39
CANDIDATES FOR CERTIFICATE
Adams, Carleton Wier San Antonio, Texas
Adams, Frederic Eliot New York City
Adler, Rudolf Sartorious Atlanta, Ga.
302
REGISTER OF STUDEXJ'S
owo
Alcantara, db, Armando, B.S., Sch. of Arts and Trades, Lima 1906. . .Lima, Peru
Barber, Hi rbbrt Coles New York City
Blakbhan, Frederick T., A.B., Princeton 1906 New York City
Bonestkll, Chesley Knight, Jr Tucson, Ariz.
Cassebeer, Walter Henry Rochester, N. Y.
Dean, Hi:nrv Charles New York City
Flanagan, Albert Edward East Orange, N. J.
Fonts, Arthur, Jr New York City
Frees, Harry John New York City
Greenberg, Abraham Benton, A.B., C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Gugler, Erich Milwaukee, Wis.
Gunther, George Philip New York City
Hartman, Harris Vincent Milwaukee, Wis.
Hartwig, Frederick John Hoboken, N. J.
H axb y , Robert Van Loan Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Hickenlooper, George St. Louis, Mo.
Hoag, Leon Huested New York City
Hthan, Sam Lightner San Francisco, Cal.
Ingle, John William, Jr New York City
Klein, Walter Weehawken, N. J.
Knapp, George Arnold Chicago, 111.
Knight, John Jacob Avon, N. Y.
Lang, John Thomas New York City
Mackby, Julius, B.S., C. C. N. Y., 1900 New York City
Mahnken, Louis New York City
Morales, Leonardo Havana, Cuba
Morewood, Francis Edmund Englewood, N. J.
Murphy, Henry Cruse, Jr New York City
Passman, Matthew Oscar New York City
Phillips, Edward Somerville J New York City
Schmidt, Edward Gunther New York City
Schmidt, Julius W New York City
Schneider, Walter Schlesinger New York City
Seidenberg, Roderick New York City
Smith, Howard Dwight, C.E. Ohio State 1907 Dayton, Ohio
Staub, Peter Michael Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Sugarman, Morris Henry New York City
Swortwout, Russell George Scarsdale, N. Y.
Thompson, William Stuart New York City
Van Dreser, Walter Gloversville, N. Y.
Weaver, John Allen Weehawken, N. J.
Weber, Rudolf Herman New York City
Whiton, Augustus S New York City
Zelenko, William New York City
Total candidates for certificate 47
NON -MATRICULATED STUDENTS
Adams, Arthur Frederick Hogarth Spokane, Wash.
Barili, Alfredo, Jr Atlanta, Ga.
Boillot, Elmer Kansas City, Mo.
Burdett, Thomas Henry Middletown, Novia Scotia
Cave, William Perry Lynchburg, Va.
Christian, Anna May Minneapolis, Minn.
Cornell, Joseph Henry Lawrence, L. I.
Cowie, Robert St. Paul, Minn.
Distin, William George Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Dittmer, Charles Herman Kent, Ohio
304 FACULTY OF FINE ARTS
Ettart, Russell, B.P. Furman 189s New York City
Haight, Alton Clark Brookfield Center, Conn.
Hall, Bernice Kingston New York City
H alley, William Marquette New York City
Huber, Joseph Constant, Jr Toledo, Ohio
Johnston, Howard, Jr St. Paul, Minn.
Kenyon, Henry Russell New York City
Kniffin, Herbert Reynolds New York City
Lewis, Percy Parke Waterbury, Conn.
Mackenzie, James Cameron, Jr Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.
Maurer, Herman Bartholomaus Hempstead, L. I.
Mead, Charles Barry Hartford, Conn.
Meyer, Hans Charles New York City
Morganstern, George A Easton, Pa.
Nostrand, Eugene Stanton Arlington, N. J.
Porter, Arthur Kingsley, A.B., Yale 1904 New York City
Rott, Maxwell New York City
Seabury, Harry Mumford Springfield, Mass.
Senillosa, Julius Buenos Ayres, Argentine, S.A.
Torre, Peter, Jr New Orleans, La.
Trowbridge, Silas Duncan Atlanta, Ga.
Westcott, George Edwin, Jr Waterville, N.Y.
White, Clifton Winsor Summit, N. J.
Zink, Anthony New York City
Total Non-Matriculated students 34
CANDIDATES FOR THE HIGHER DEGREES
Murray, Lily Sylvester, A.B., 1905 Montclair, N. J.
NOT IN ACTUAL RESIDENCE
Bottomly, William Lawrence, B.S., 1906 Villa Mirafiore, Rome
Total 2
School of Music
GRADUATE STUDENT
Bellinger, Franz Indianapol-s, Ind.
[I] CANDIDATES FOR DEGREE
Fuchs, Henry Hewitt New York City
Gilbert, George Frederick Madison, N. I
Gottlieb, Jacques Lawrence New York City
Kugel, Adolph New York CitV
Norden, N. Lindsay New York City
Webster-Powell, Alma, (Mrs) New York City
[6] NON-MATRICULATED STUDENTS
Ash, Mrs. Mark New York City
Bedell, Annie Louise New York City
Capo, Gainsborg Rubin New York City
Carames, Angelo New York City
Fuess, Harold Louis Waterville, N. Y.
Gottlieb, Rose New York City
Graef, Elizabeth Antoinette New York City
Harrat, Frank Turner New York City
Harowitz, Paul New York City
REGISTER OF STUDENTS 305
Hyde, Mary G New York City
Jackson, Eda Fannie New York City
Kendall, Elsie Frances New York City
King, Ethel May Cecelia New York City
Knight, Nancy New York City
Kraft, William Jacob Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Mehler, Elsa Sauter New York City
Meyer, Maud Emma New York City
Meyer, Virginia Eleanor Coytesville, N. J.
Ulanov, Nathan New York City
Vogel, Harry New York City
Winter, Norman New York City
Woodford, Helen Tredway Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
[aa]
SUMMARY— FINE ARTS
Architecture
Students candiates for degree 39
Students, candiates for certificate 47
Non-matriculated students 34
Candidates for the higher degrees 2
Total, Architecture 122
Music 29
Grand Total 151
BARNARD COLLEGE
TRUSTEES
Silas B. Brownell, LL.D., Chairman
Mrs. A. A. Anderson, Vice-Chairman
Frederick S. Wait, Clerk
George A. Plimpton, Treasurer
Silas B. Brownell, LL.D. Frederic B. Jennings
Mrs. Joseph H. Choate Mrs. Henry N. Munn
Mrs. Alfred Meyer Nicholas Murray Butler.PIi.D.
George A. Plimpton LL.D. (Cantab. ),Litt.D. (Oxon.)
Mrs. James Talcott Albert G. Milbank
Mrs. Henry Fairfield Osborn Mrs. Francis P. Kinnicutt
Mrs. A. A. Anderson Miss Clara B. Spence
Frederick S. Wait Charles Stewart Smith
Edward W. Sheldon Howard Townsend
Rev. William M. Grosvenor, D.D. John G. Milburn
Seth Low, LL.D. Florence Colgate
Franklin B. Lord Mrs. Malcolm D. Whitman
Mary Stuart Pullman
Standing Committees
1907
Executive Committee: Dr. Brownell {Chairman), Mrs. Ander-
son (Vice-Chairman), Mr. Wait (Clerk), Dr. Butler, Mr. Low, Mr.
Milbank, Mrs. Osborn, Mr. Plimpton, Mr. Sheldon.
On Finance: Mr. Milbank (Chairman), Mr. Lord, and Mr. Smith.
On Buildings and Grounds: Mrs. Osborn (Chairman), Mrs. An-
derson, Mrs. Munn, and The President (ex-officio).
On Education: Mr. Jennings (Chairman), Miss Spbncb, Mr.
Townsend, and The President (ex-officio).
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
Officers of the Faculty
> Laura Drake Gill, A.M., D.C.L., Dean and ex-officio Member of the
University Council
William Tenney Brewster, A.M., Acting Dean
Henry E. Crampton, Ph.D., Acting Secretary
* Absent on leave
306
THE FACULTY 307
James Harvey Robinson, Ph.D., Elected Delegate to the University
Council {term expires iqoq)
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D., (Cantab.) Litt.D. (Oxon)
President
1 Laura Drake Gill, A.M., D.C.L., Dean
Edwin R. A. Seligman, Ph.D., LL.D, McVickar Professor of Political
Economy
Herbert L. Osgood, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of History
Edward Delavan Perry, Ph.D., LL.D., Jay Professor of Greek
George Rice Carpenter, A.B., Professor of Rhetoric and English
Composition
Franklin Henry Giddings, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Sociology
and the History of Civilization
John B. Clark, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Political Economy
James Rignall Wheeler, Ph. ~D., Professor of Greek Archceology and Art ,
Frank N. Cole, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics
James Harvey Robinson, Ph.D., Professor of History
Calvin Thomas, LL.D., Gebhard Professor of the Germanic Languages
and Literatures
Carlo Leonardo Speranza, A.M., B. es L., Professor of Italian
• William P. Trent, M.A., LL.D., D.C.L., Professor of English
Literature
Herbert Gardiner Lord, A.M., Professor of Philosophy
Nelson Glenn McCrea, Ph.D., Professor of Latin
Livingston Farrand, A.M., M.D., Professor of Anthropology
♦Benjamin D. Woodward, Ph.D., Professor of the Romance Languages
and Literatures
Henry E. Crampton, Ph.D., Professor of Zoology
William Tenney Brewster, A.M., Professor of English, and Acting Dean
Charles Knapp, Ph.D., Professor of Classical Philology
Henry L. Moore, Ph.D., Professor of Political Economy
Herbert Maule Richards, Sc.D., Professor of Botany
Margaret E. Maltby, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of Physics
Louis Auguste Loiseaux, B.S., Adjunct Professor of the Romance
Languages and Literatures
James T. Shotwell, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of History
George Willis Botsford, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of History
Edward Kasner, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of Mathematics
William P. Montague, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of Philosophy
Grace A. Hubbard, A.M., Adjunct Professor of English
Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch, A.B., Adjunct Professor of Social
Economy
Mabel Foote Weeks, A.B., Adjunct Professor of English
1 Absent on leave.
308 BARNARD COLLEGE
Standing Committees of the Faculty
Committee on the Program of Studies: The Dean, chairman.
Professors Knapp, Richards, Maltby and Montague
;- Committee on Admissions: Professors Cole, chairman, Knapp and
Richards
Committee on Scholarships: The Dean, chairman, Professor
Hubbard and Dr. Hirst
Committee on Honors: Professors Robinson, chairman, Kasner
and Dr. Braun
Committee on Student Organizations: Professors Shotwell,
chairman, Moore, and Dr. Reimer
Other Officers of Instruction.
Marie Reimer, Ph.D. Allen W. Porterfield, A.M.
Henry Bargy, A.M. Edgar H. Sturtevant, Ph.D.
Gertrude M. Hirst, Ph.D. William C. Krathwohl, A.B.
Wilhelm Alfred Braun, Ph.D. Clark Wissler, Ph.D.
Tracy Elliot Hazen, Ph.D. William B. Parker, A.B.
Raymond C. Osburn, Ph.D. Algernon De V. Tassin, A.M.
Henri F. Muller, B. es L. Dino Bigongiari, A.B.
Eleanor Keller, A.B. John Lawrence Gerig, Ph.D.
Ida H. Ogilvie, Ph.D. Allan F. Westcott, A.M.
Margaret A. Reed, A.B. Maude Alice Huttmann, A.M.
T. Leslie Shear, Ph.D. Eugene E. Agger, Ph.D.
Harold C. Brown, Ph.D. Robert Emmet Chaddock, A.M.
Pauline Hamilton Dederer, Herbert H. Woodrow, A.B.
A.M. Alice Haskell, A.B.
Alexander Otto Bechert, A.M. Grace Potter Reynolds, A.M.
Samuel R. Williams, Ph.D. Elizabeth Ilsley Thompson, A.B.
Marion E. Latham, A.M. Grace Langford, S.B.
Frank C. Becker, A.B.
For other officers of the University who may give instruction to stu-
dents of Barnard College, consult the several departmental statements.
Officers of Administration
N. W. Liggett, A.B., Bursar
Anna E. H. Meyer, A.B., Secretary
Agnes Opdyke, A.B., Registrar
Frederick A. Goetze, M.Sc Consulting Engineer
James H. Canfield, LL.D., Litt.D. (Oxon.), Librarian
Bertha L. Rockwell, Custodian of the Ella Weed Reading-Room
GENERAL STATEMENT
In 1883 the Trustees of Columbia College offered degrees to women
ADMISSION 309
who should be able to pass the necessary examinations, without, how-
ever, providing instruction for them. The resulting system, called
The Collegiate Course for Women, proved unsatisfactory to both par-
ties. Therefore Barnard College was organized in 1889 to provide
instruction for women which should be identical with or equivalent to
that provided by Columbia for men.
For eleven years it duplicated for women as far as possible the cur-
riculum of Columbia College, and also registered for graduate work
under the University Faculties women who held the bachelor's degree
from institutions of good standing. Its instructors were members
of the University staff. Examinations for entrance, those given in
course, and those for degrees, were conducted by Columbia University.
During the first three undergraduate years separate instruction was
given to women; in the senior year they were admitted to certain
courses in the University. Graduate students attended many courses
at the University under the Faculties of Philosophy, Political Science,
and Pure Science, the laboratory work in science being done at Bar-
nard College.
However, Barnard's numerical growth made inappropriate the
informal arrangement for instruction which was the natural method
at the outset, and it became necessary to recognize formally the
status which had gradually come into existence. Accordingly, an
agreement was entered into in January, 1900, by which Barnard
was included in the University system. Barnard is now an indepen-
dent college for women with a corporation and a faculty of its own
vested with all the powers commonly belonging to such bodies. At
the same time, it shares the library, the instruction, and the degrees
of Columbia University.
A more exact idea of the relations between Barnard College and
Columbia University and also of the relations between Barnard
College and Teachers College is given in the re'sutne' of the agreement
above mentioned to be found in the current edition of the Announce-
ment of Barnard College. This may be obtained without charge upon
application to the Secretary of Barnard College.
ADMISSION
The Committee on Admission has charge of everything relating to
this subject.
The general regulations for admission are the same as those for
Columbia College, see page 172.
Every candidate for admission to Barnard College, either to the
freshman class or to a special course, is required at the entrance ex-
aminations to offer subjects amounting to fifteen (15) points as
indicated below. A point here represents a course of five periods
weekly throughout an academic year of the preparatory school.
The candidate must offer:
310 BARNARD COLLEGE
COUNTING IN POINT8
English 3
Elementary Mathematics 3
and in case of a candidate for the A.B. degree:
Elementary Latin 4
or in case of a candidate for the B.S. degree:
Science 2
Advanced or Intermediate subjects 2
or in case of a candidate for the general two-years' course :
Ancient or Modern Foreign Languages 4
History, Foreign Languages, Mathematics or
Science 5
The candidate may offer any of .the following[subjects without other
restriction than that to offer an advanced subject will involve offering
the corresponding elementary subject as well:
COUNTING IN POINTS
Elementary Greek 3
Elementary History ' 2
Drawing
Music
Intermediate French
Intermediate German
* Advanced English
1 Advanced Greek
> Advanced History
1 Advanced Latin
Advanced Mathematics
> Advanced Physics
The candidate may offer not more than 4 points in all from the
three subjects following:
COUNTING IN POINTS
Elementary French 2
Elementary German 2
Italian 2
Spanish a
The candidate may offer not more than 2 points in all from the five
subjects following:
COUNTING IN POINTS
Botany 1
Chemistry 1
Elementary Physics 1
Physiography 1
1 Zoology 1
For full definitions of the above requirements and for information
1 Candidates will be exam ined in this subject only in January and September.
ADMISSION 311
regarding the times and places at which entrance examinations are
held, regulations regarding division of examinations, examinations
outside of New York, application blank, and examination fee, see
pages 154-163.
Certificates in Lieu of Entrance Examinations
See the "Acceptance of Certificates in Columbia College," page 174
Entrance Conditions and Probation
A student may be admitted to the freshman class on probation
when the total number of points received by her in the entrance
examinations amounts to eleven (n) out of the total required fifteen
(15) points; but general deficiency in any one of the prescribed sub-
jects will be regarded as disqualifying a candidate for admission.
A student admitted conditionally or by certificate will be held under
probation during the first half-year of residence. For a detailed
statement regarding the conditions of probation, see "On Probation
in Columbia College," page 175.
To Advanced Standing
See the "Requirements for Admission to Advanced Standing in
Columbia College," page 174.
In addition, the credits granted in any subject to a student ad-
mitted with advanced standing may be withdrawn or diminished in
amount, if, in pursuing such subject after admission to Barnard Col-
lege, the student prove that the granting of the credits was wholly
or in part unwarranted by her previous work.
No student may receive a degree who has resided less than two full
half-years at Barnard College.
No applicant will be allowed to enter the senior class as a candidate
for a degree after October 15 in any year.
As Special Students
Candidates for admission as special students must make application
in writing at least one week before the first day of the entrance exami-
nations in September or in January. Proper blanks for this purpose
may be obtained from the Registrar.
Special students in Barnard College are of two classes: non-
matriculated and matriculated.
Non-matriculated special students must be women of mature age
who wish to pursue chiefly advanced courses of special study. They
may be admitted at the discretion of the Committee on Admissions
without passing formal entrance examinations. They must furnish
proof that they have at some time pursued the studies included in the
312 BARNARD COLLEGE
matriculation examinations and must satisfy the requirements of the
department that they desire to enter.
No courses taken by non-matriculated special students can at any
time be counted by them toward a degree.
Matriculated special students are women who wish, without taking
a degree, to make a serious study of some subject or group of subjects.
They must pass the regular examinations for admission to the fresh-
man class and have full credit for fifteen (15) points of the entrance
requirements. (See p. 309.) They may, therefore, in event of a
change of plan, be credited with such of their courses as may coincide
with the courses leading to a degree.
Information regarding the regulations governing the election of
studies, amount of work, attendance, examinations, etc., of special
students is contained in the Barnard College Announcement which can
be obtained without charge from the Secretary of Barnard College.
MATRICULATION, REGISTRATION, FEES
Detailed information regarding matriculation, registration, and fees
will be found in the current Announcement of Barnard College, which
can be obtained without charge on application to the Secretary of
Barnard College.
DORMITORY
Detailed information about Brooks Hall, the new hall of residence
which was opened for occupancy in September, 1907, can be obtained
from the Secretary of Barnard College, New York City, N. Y.
THE PROGRAM OF STUDIES
Upon completion of a curriculum arranged on one of the plans to be
described below, the student is recommended by the Faculty of
Barnard College for the degree of Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of
Science.
I THE PROGRAM OF STUDIES FOR THE DEGREE OF
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Unless the equivalents are offered for admission, the following
courses are prescribed:
English A 6 points
English B 6
French A and German A 12
History A 6
Latin A or B 6
Mathematics A 6
Philosophy A 6
PROGRAM OF STUDIES 313
Physical Education A and B 4 points
Economics A 3
Chemistry 5-6 or Physics 11-12 6
Botany, Chemistry, Geology, Physics, Psychology
(Experimental), or Zoology : two half-year cours-
es in addition to the foregoing requirements in
Physics or Chemistry 6
Major subject 18
Free electives to complete the total of 124
H THE PROGRAM OF STUDIES FOR THE DEGREE OF
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE
Unless the equivalents are offered for admission, the following
courses are prescribed:
English A 6 points
English B 6
French A and German A 12
History A 6
Mathematics A 6
Philosophy A 6
Physical Education A and B 4
Grouped work in Astronomy, Botany, Chemistry,
Geography, Geology, Mineralogy, Physics, Ex-
perimental Psychology, and Zoology, amounting
to a total of at least 7°
(Of these 70 points at least 28 points shall be taken
in a major subject, at least 12 points in an allied
minor subject, and at least 12 points in a diverse
minor.)
m GENERAL TWO- YEARS' COURSE, NOT LEADING TO A DEGREE
This general course is specially arranged to furnish the collegiate
foundation for professional work at Teachers College. It comprises
64 points of work and includes the following prescribed courses unless
their equivalents have been offered for admission:
English A or a more advanced course in rhetoric 6 points
English Literature : two half-year courses 4 or 6
French, German, Italian, Spanish: two half-year courses
in each of two modern languages, preferably French
and German 12
History A or a more advanced course in history 6
Physical Education A and B 4
Botany, Chemistry, Geology, Physics, or Zoology: two
half-year courses in each of two natural sciences that
have not been offered for entrance, at least 12
Elective courses to complete the total of 64
314 BARNARD COLLEGE
In regard to the choice of elective courses a student
should seek the advice of the professor in charge of
her prospective major subject in Teachers College.
After satisfactory completion of 64 points of work in Barnard Col-
lege, including the courses listed above, a student may transfer,
without examination, to the professional curriculum of Teachers Col-
lege and become a candidate for a Teachers College diploma and the
degree of Bachelor of Science in Education.
In consequence of the agreement on the part of Barnard College to
provide the collegiate course required by Teachers College for ad-
mission to its professional curriculum, Teachers College has withdrawn
its collegiate curriculum.
IV OPTIONS IN THE PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS FOR CANDIDATES
FOR A BARNARD COLLEGE DEGREE
A student may plan her work in such a way as to earn a professional
diploma from Teachers College at the same time as her academic degree
from Barnard College. After completing in Barnard College 94 points
of work, including all courses prescribed for one of the bachelor's
degrees of Barnard College and Education A, she may transfer, with
the permission of the Dean of Barnard College and the Dean of Teach-
ers College, to Teachers College at the end of her junior year and
become a candidate also for the bachelor's diploma in teaching. A
student so transferred will be recommended for her prospective degree
by the Faculty of Barnard College, on its receipt of a statement from
the Faculty of Teachers College of her satisfactory completion of the
requirements for a bachelor's diploma.
For full details regarding the major subjects in teaching, their re-
quirements and prerequisites in collegiate work, and the most advan-
tageous division of work in education, the student is referred to the
current announcement of Teachers College.
Scholarships, Prizes, and Honors
(See page 411)
REGISTER OF STUDENTS
SENIORS— CLASS OF 1908.
Allen, Elizabeth New York City
Armstrong, Clairette Papin New York City
Armstrong, Laura Julia New York City
Ash, Alma New York City
Askowith, Dora Chelsea, Mass.
Axt, May Charlotte New York City
♦Back, Elizabeth Mitchell Yonkers, N. Y.
Beekman, Rose New York City
Beers, Bessie Andrews New York City
Boardman, Martha Tracy Bloomfield, N. J.
Brundin, Thorborg Marie New York City
♦Brush, Anna Cooley New York City
Budds, Mary Hornor New York City
Burrows, Edith Maie Tarrytown, N. Y.
Casey, Mary Agnes New York City
Clapp, Elsie Ripley New York City
Crowell, Marion Barton New York City
*Dwyer, Eleanor Agnes New York City
Eastman, Marjorie McClintock Andalusia, Pa.
*Eaton, Clara Cecelia New York City
Eltzner, Dorothea New York City
Everett, Ethel Grace New York City
♦Ferns, Edith Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Flack, Cornelia Andrews New Rochelle, N. Y.
Fox, Elizabeth Freeman New York City
Glen, Helen Renwick Elizabeth, N. J.
Golde, Margaret Doris New York City
Gray, Helen Young New York City
Heim, Lillian New York City
Helmrich, Elsie Winifred New Rochelle, N. Y.
♦Henderson, Nathalie New York City
Hershfield, Alice Leah New York City
♦Houston, Jessie Ferguson Orange, N. J.
♦Hufeland, Eleanor Mount Vernon, N. Y.
♦Hufeland, Marie Augusta Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Hunsdon, Eleanor Cary New Rochelle, N. Y.
Jeidell, Helmina (Mrs. E. J. Jeidell) New York City
Kerner, Anna Mildred Chester, N. Y.
Klein, Maude Irene New York City
♦Marshall, Agnes Margaret New York City
Mastin, Florence Josephine New York City
Maxon, Mary Mount Vernon, N. Y»
Miller, Mary Agnes New York City
Morehouse, Esther Bridgeport, Conn.
Muller, Ada Hermine New York City
315
316
BARNARD COLLEGE
Murtha, Mary Washburn New York City
Newland, Marguerite Corlies New York City
Peterson, Mabel Louise New York City
♦Prahl, Josephine Anna New York City
Quinby, Elsie May White Plains, N. Y.
Quinn, MayKatherine Bayonne, N. J.
Rehmann, Elsa Newark, N. J.
Requa, Adelaide New York City
♦Richardson, Edith Cushing New York City
Rothenberg, Annie Meridian, Miss.
Sammet, Florence New York City
Savitz, Linda Belle Westfield, N. J.
Schramm, Ethel Bell New York City
Stein, Gertrude Rose New York City
•Steinberg, Pauline Elizabeth, N. J.
Strauss, Marguerite Julie New York City
Tattershall, Louise May White Haven, Pa.
Traitel, Louise New York City
Turnbull, Annie Grace Tuckahoe, N. Y.
Veith, Helen Ida New York City
Wells, Gertrude East Orange, N. J.
Wells, Hilda E Keyport, N. J.
Wolff, Florence Martha New York City
Woolsey, Catherine Buckingham Englewood, N. Ji
Yates, Margaret Hall New York City
Young, Jennie Marie New York City
* Candidates for a Teachers College diploma in Education.
Seniors — Class of 1908 71
JUNIORS— CLASS OF 1909
Abraham, Mathilde New York City
Alexander, Irma New York City
Allan, Alice Ruth Montclair, N. J.
Arkenburgh, Gladys Stokley New York City
Armstrong, Leonora Louise Upper Montclair, N. J.
Aron, Beatrice Marguerite New York City
Barrows, Winifred Greenwich, Conn.
vom B aur, Eva Elise New York City
Beam, Laura Ella Elizabeth, N. J.
Beekman, Beatrice New York City
Bernard, Una Merrilees London, England
Boas, Helene Marie Grantwood, N. J.
Boyd, Marion Alice New York City
Bugbee, Emma Methuen, Mass.
Calman, Dorothy New York City
Carroll, Antoinette Lartique New York City
Cochran, Jessie Isabelle New York City
Coveney, Regina New York City
Craig, Eleanor Woodworth New York City
Curran, Mary Eleanor New York City
Daniels, Mary Esther New York City
Dann, Margie Ethel Bloomfield, N. J.
Demarest, Mary Celia Nanuet, N. Y .
Dempsey, Josephine Agnes V New York City
Ernst, Florence Cornelia New York City
Falk, Hannah Carolyn New York City
Feltus, Zoraida Watertown, N. Y.
JUNIOR CLASS 317
Fransioli, Antoinette New York City
Frink, Margaret Huddleston New York City
Gay, Eleanor New York City
Godley, Mary Frances New York City
Goldberg, Julia New York City
Goodwin, Ethel Lizzie New York City
Gordon, Anna Miriam New York City
Grant, Alice Catherine Yonkers, N. Y.
Hall, Theodora Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Hamil, Martha Troy, Ala.
Hardy, Ruth Gillette New York City
Harrison, Marjorie Emmons Tazewell, Va.
Hastings, Elinor Isabel New York City
Hebberd, Emma Antoinette New York City
Hedle y, Hilda Warren New York City
Hellin, Esther Belle New York City
Hochheimer, Rita New York City
Hodsdon, Ethel Wentworth Jersey City, N. J.
Hoermann, Martha Hoboken, N. J.
Holm, Anna Sophie Perth Amboy, N. J.
Hubbard, Jennie Fields Warren Bloomfield, N. J.
Ingalls, Frances May New York City
Ivimey, Ethel Marguerite New York City
Jaggard, Alice Granger New York City
Johnson, Pauline Dustin Dana, Mass.
Josephi, Edith New York City
Kaufmann, Jeanette Hellman New York City
Kenney, Margaret Frances Plainfield, N. J.
Kerr, Lois Englewood, N. J.
King, Marie Bernadette Upper Montclair, N. J.
Kloster, Vera Eleanor New York City
Kupfer, Vere Beulah New York City
Lee, Olga New York City
Leerburger, Berenice New York City
Levy, Jessie New York City
Levy, Sadie Ethel (Mrs. S. E. Levy) New York City
Logan, Una Yonkers Park, N. Y.
McKeown, Matilda J New York City
McLean, Myra Detroit, Mich.
MacDonald, Evelyn Blunt New York City
Marshall, Mary Osborne New York City
Messenger, Henriette Searing Dover, N. J.
Miller, Eunice Hotaling New York City
Murch, Hortense Dean Glen Ridge, N. J.
Newbold, Helen New York City
Nyitray, Ethel New York City
O'Brien, Josephine Gertrude New York City
O'Gorman, Ellen New York City
Oppenheim, Ella New York City
Patten, Portia New York City
Phillips, Edna New York City
Phillips, Helen Sarah New York City
Quinb y, Mary Gladys Orange, N. J.
Rich, Nellie Edna Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Richardson, Adelaide Agnes New York City
Rilke, Olga Emma New York City
Riordon, Antoinette New York City
3i8
BARNARD COLLEGE
Robinson, Elizabeth Devereaux New York City
Roe, Olive Leah New York City
Rome, Sara New York City
Rosenfelder, Fannie Louisville, Ky.
Samek, Blanche New York City
Sapinsky, Bertha New Albany, Ind .
Scales, Edna Rebecca Jersey City, N. J.
Scheuer, Helen Gertrude New York City
Schlesinger, Mildred Deshon Yonkers, N. Y.
Shale, B yrde Belle New York City
Silbernagel, Lillian New York City
Sillcox, Cecelia Minna New York City
Smith, Elsie Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Smithers, Adelaide Ellen New York City
Smithers, Herlinda Genevieve New York City
Stark, May Belle East Orange, N. J.
Stearn, Mabel Frieda New York City
Sto well, Ruth Kate Binghamton, N. Y.
Swenson, Mary Elizabeth New York City
Talpey, Edith May New York City
Thompson, Lucy Irene New York City
Turnbull, Laura Shearer Tuckahoe, N. Y.
Underwood, Anna Belleville, N. J.
Ver Planck, Georgia Anna White Plains, N. Y.
Westaway, Lois Bessie New York City
Weston, Ethel Genevieve New York City
Wilson, Marian Newark, N. J.
Wood, Hilda New York City
Woodhull, Mildred New York City
Wyeth, Florence New York City
Zangler, Elizabeth Cathryn Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Juniors — Class of 1909 115
SOPHOMORES— CLASS OF 1910
Candidates for the A.B. Degree
Aiguier, Helen Louise Newark, N. J.
Alexander, Lee Frances New York City
Anderson, Lillian Sophie New York City
Armstrong, Maud Elizabeth New York City
Auerbach, Clarice New York City
Bailey, Mary Witter New York City
Barrows, Tessie New York City
Black, Florence Atwood New York City
Bohan, Lena Plainfield, N. J.
Bonfils, Gladys Alden New York City
Burger, Frances New York City
Childs, Ruth New York City
Cooper, Clara Romaine Somerville, N. J.
Cowen, Elfrida Dora New York City
Crosby, Clarita Frances New York City
Crossman, Helen Louise New York City
Dean, Hetty Anna Little Silver, N. J.
Debouy, Cecile Catherine New York City
Downs, Mildred Jersey City, N. J.
Eddy, Elise Savoye Bayonne, N. J.
Eggleston, Margery Katherine New York City
SOPHOMORE CLASS 319
Egleston , Lilian Hillyer Elizabeth, N. J.
Emery, Maude Emma Newark, N. J.
Enk, Florence Frances Somerville, N. J.
Fancher, Edna Margaret New York City
Firebaugh, Bertha Harriet New York City
Fleming, Carrie Orr New York City
Flint, Marie Louise New York City
Fox, Harriet Ruth New York City
Frame, Rachel Moore Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Franks, Gretchen Malvina Bound Brook, N. J.
Gibson, Marion Lathrop New York City
Hamburger, Nannettb Frances New York City
Heller, Edna New York City
Henderson, Grace West Chester, N. Y.
Herrmann, May Therese New York City
Hill, Antoinette Dyett Netherwood, N. J.
Holzm an, Bessie New York City
Hopewell, Florence Isabel New York City
Hopewell, Stella Louise New York City
Hoyt, Helen Sarah Nutley, N. J.
Hunter, Gertrude Laura Plainfield, N. J.
Huntington, Anne Elderkin Scarsdale, N. Y.
Ivimey, Muriel Rhoda New York City
Jacques, Mary Voorhees Elizabeth, N. J.
Kirchwey, Dorothy Browning New York City
Lawrence, Ethel Elizabeth New York City
Lewis, Clara Alice New York City
Loehrsen, Adelaide New York City
Long, Doris New York City
McCann, Mabel Dorothy New York City
McPherson, Helen New York City
MacMurray, Christella Frances Nyack, N. Y.
Maison, Ellen Narr Rutherford, N. J.
Mandel, Lena New York City
Martin, Elaine Lebanon, Tenn.
Martin, Eleanor Marion Perth Amboy, N. J.
Meier, Grace Edith New York City
Monteser, Marion Julia Yonkers, N. Y.
Moses, Rose New York City
Nammack, Mary New York City
Nitchie, Elizabeth New York City
Nottingham, Jessie Ray: Portland, Ore.
O'Donnell, Agnes Teresa New York City
O'Donnell, Margaret Mary Alacoque New York City
Palliser, Mabel Bird New York City
Palmer, Edna Adeline New York City
Plaut, Elsie New York City
Platt, Rosetta F New York City
Rawcliffe, Elizabeth New York City
Read, Florence Wallace New York City
Reeder, Grace Amelia Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Reilly, Dorothy Cecilia New York City
Renton, Margaret New York City
Rose, Florence Estelle Hackensack, N. J.
Savitz, Helen Elizabeth Westfield, N. J.
Seguine, Edith Christine New York City
Shaw, Agnes Gardner Rockland, Lake, N. Y.
320 BARNARD COLLEGE
Shaw, Ethel Lord New York City
Silverman, Sulamith New York City
Spalding, Leone Florence New Rochelle, N. Y.
Stimson, Maude Beulah New York City
Thompson, Olive New York City
Wagner, Julia Anna New York City
Wayt, Hazel Irene New York City
Weinstein, Marion Waterbury, Conn.
West, Julia Ray New York City
Wiesner, Alma Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Wvlie, Jennie Dwight New York City
Candidate for the B.S. Degree
Schwarte, Johanna Julia Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
Candidate for transfer at the end of two years to the professional schools
of the University,
Woodhull, Hazel New York City
Sophomores — Class of 1910 91
FRESHMEN— CLASS OF 191 1
Candidates for the A.B. Degree
Allen, Edith Louise New York City
Bennett, Alice Laura Georgetown, Conn.
Bishop, Fanny Aurill New York City
Bloch, Stella New York City
Bogert, Madeleine New York City
Bosch, Josephine Adele New York City
Brown, Helen Boonton, N. J.
Brown, Juanita New York City
Bruning, Emilie Elizabeth Margaret New York City
Burke, Agnes Madeline Morristown, N. J.
Burne, Eleanor New York City
Burns, Edith Crowell New York City
Burns, Ruth A Port Chester, N. Y .
Callan, Anna May New York City
Carroll, Ruth Warwick, N. Y.
Cassel, Therese New York City
Clement, Amelia Aurelie , New York City
Conroy, Mary Sylvester New York City
Coombs, Helen Copeland Yonkers, N. Y.
Crandell, Helen Hopkins Hempstead, N. Y.
Currier, Harriet Joy Brewer, Me.
Deacon, Edith May New York City
Denike, Agnes May New York City
Dieterich, Daphne Dame New York City
Dodge, Mildred New York City
Druding, Marguerite Dorothy Cecelia New York City
Duncan, Adele New York City
Dwyer, Dorothy T New York City
Eaton, Levanchia Vibbard Dansville, N. Y.
Elder, Mabel Frances New York City
Ellisson, Estelle James New York City
English, Elizabeth Goshen, N. Y.
Fox, Jessie Douglas Yonkers, N. Y.
Fueslein, Vera Amanda New York City
Gay, Katharine New York City
FRESHMAN CLASS 321
Gerstein, Rose New York City
Girdner, Penelope Morgan New York City
Gleason, Elsie New York City
Green a walt, Louise de Forest Red Bank, N. J.
Greiff, Lottie June New York City
Haithwaite, Charlotte New York City
Hakes, Ruth Johnston Ilion, N. Y.
Hanley, Kathleen Veronica New York City
Harder, Elfrida Philadelphia, Pa.
Hart, Margaret Tower New York City
Hays, Bessie Rosa New York City
Heiden, Irma Fanny New York City
Henry, Dorothy Yonkers, N. Y.
Herrmann, Anna Louise New York City
Hill, Alice Taylor New York City
Hirsh, Madeleine New York City
Holzwasser, Florrie New York City
Ihlseng, Olga Kathryn New York City
Jackson, Violetta New York City
Johnson, Louie Estelle New York City
Johnston, Marjorie Armstrong New York City
Kempton, Ethel May i Yonkers, N. Y.
King, Olive Josephine New York City
Kronberg, Katherine Jeanette White Plains, N. Y.
Kugler, Anna Augusta New York City
Leveridge, Ethel Sylvia New York City
Lovell, Grace Greene New York City
McClenehan, Edith Martha New York City
McGrath, Josephine Livingston Manor, N. Y.
McKeever, Edna Josephine New York City
Mahon, Dorothea Helen New York City
Mayer, Theresa New York City
Messing, Mildred Katherine New York City
Minor, Susan Brown Freehold, N. J.
Mordecai, Eva Cecile New York City
Morgenstern, Addie Fredericka New York City
Oberndorfer, Marian New York City
Ockers, Louise Elizabeth Oakdale, N. Y.
O'Gorman, Alice Margaret New York City
Plummer, Marguerite New York City
Polhemus, Mary Bartow New York City
Porter, Helen Maud Yonkers, N. Y.
Prochazka, Ottilie New York City
Randolph, Frances Maude Fitz New York City
Reid, Mabel Jean New York City
Reynar, Marguerite Wooton Boonton, N. J.
Runyon, Helen De Mott West Summit, N. J.
Salmowitz, Rose L New York City
Sanborn, Mildred Louise New York City
Sandford, Georgina Dansville, N. Y.
Saul,, Gertrude Elizabeth New York City
Schoedler, Lillian Helen New York City
Seveso, Angelina New York City
Shaw, Grace Margaret White Plains, N. Y.
Shaw, Mary Braman New York City
Shwitzer, Myrtle New York City
Sickels, Katherine Hamilton New York City
322 BARNARD COLLEGE
Sidell, Ruth Hillard Somerville, N. J.
Slawter, Rose Derrickson Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Sonn, Claudia Helen New York City
Stagen, Ruth Madeline New York City
Stapff, Hetta New York City
Steinecke, Jeannette Amelia New York City
Stewart, Camilla New York City
Stewart, Natalie New York City
Stryker, Laura MacElwain White Plains, N. Y.
Thompson, Elizabeth New York City
Thorne, Elizabeth Frances Nyack, N. Y."
Thorne, Nathalie New York City
Tiemann, Kate Huntington New York City
Van Anda, Julia Blanche New York City
Van Buskirk, Annie Schmelzel New York City
Vose, Jeanette Churchill New York City
Wadelton, Neda Ludmilla Bronxville, N. Y.
Waite, Etta Adelaide River Edge, N. J.
Watson, Genevieve Lindsay New York City
Weil, Amy New York City
Weymann, Linda C New York City
Willets, Geraldine White Plains, N. Y.
Wilson, Mary Badger Washington, D. C.
Wise, Helens Benedict New York City
Worrall, Helen Darlington New York City
Candidates for the B.S. Degree
Dunnet, Elizabeth Vyse New York City
Joiner, Flora Isabel Polo, 111.
Leo, Juliette : Buffalo, N. Y.
Freshmen — Class of 191 1 120
SPECIAL STUDENTS, MATRICULATED
Bailey, Margaret Hart New York City
Bamberger, Alice Clara Judith New York City
Borland, Madeline New York City
Closson, Lilian Wadsworth Orange, N. J.
Cowen, Mabel Irene New York City
Fenton, Harriet Paullin Wollaston, Mass.
Gardiner, Cara Leslie New York City
Gruenstein, Fannie New York City
Hardwick, Margaret Cleveland, Tenn.
Heimann, Edith New York City
Hodge, Charlotte Morse New York City
Holmgren, Amanda Brigham, Utah.
Kaufmann, Helen Loeb (Mrs. Mortimer J. Kaufmann) New York City
Large, Daisy Louise Mechanicsville, N. Y.
Lee, Eugenia Converse Stafford Springs, Conn.
Levy, Herma Carrie New York City
Milholland, Vida Wadhams Mills, N. Y.
Pennell, Mabel Louise Fremont, O.
Pollak, Wilma Vera New York City
Smith, Dean Florence Savannah, Ga.
Stanton, Priscilla Dixon Roslyn, N. Y.
Tiffany, Julia de Forest New York City
Tiffany, Louise Comfort New York City
Tredwell, Elizabeth Alden Seabury New York City
Matriculated Special Students 24
SPECIAL STUDENTS 323
NON -MATRICULATED
Alexander, Harriet New York City
Fleischmahin, Constance Mann New York City
Stewart, Agnes Cornelia (Mrs. A. C. Stewart) New York City
Thomson, Edith Sydnor Atlanta, Ga.
Whitney, Dorothy Westbury, L. I.
Non-matriculated Special Students 5
SUMMARY
Seniors — Class ot 1908:
Candidates for Barnard College A.B. degree alone . . 58
Candidates for Barnard College A.B. degree and
Teachers College Diploma in Education 13
— 71
Juniors — Class of 1909 115
Sophomores — Class of 1910:
Candidates for the A.B. degree 89
Candidates for the B.S. degree 1
Students in General Two -Year Course 1
— 91
Freshmen — Class of 1 9 1 1 :
Candidates for the A.B. degree 117
Candidates for the B.S. degree 3 120
397
Special Students:
Matriculated 24
Non -matriculated 5 29
426
University Students 28
Teachers College Students 148
Total 602
Eight students who matriculated in Barnard College during the Summer session of
1907 did not register for the first hall of the Academic year 1907-8.
TEACHERS COLLEGE
TRUSTEES
V. Everit Macy, Chairman
Newbold Morris, Secretary
Miss Grace H. Dodge, Treasurer
Spencer Trask Mrs. Frederick F. Thompson
William F. Bridge Nicholas Murray Butler, LL.D.
Peter B. Olney (Cantab.), Litt.D. (Oxon.)
B. Talbot B. Hyde Robert C. Ogden, LL.D.
Joseph Milbank Walter H. Page, LL.D.
Seth Low, LL.D. Howard Van Sinderen
James Speyer Frank R. Chambers
Archer M. Huntington, L.H.D. Mrs. George W. Jenkins
James E. Russell, LL.D. Arthur Iselin
Officers of the Faculty
James Earl Russell, Ph.D., LL.D Dean and ex-ofpcio Member of
the University Council
Clyde Furst, A.M Secretary
Gonzalez Lodge, LL.D.. . Elected Delegate to the University Council
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D. (Cantab.), Litt.D. (Oxon.)
President
John Francis Woodhull, Ph.D Professor of Physical Science
J. McKeen Cattell, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Psychology
Adolphe Cohn, LL.B., A.M. .Professor of the Romance Languages
and Literatures
Franklin Thomas Baker, AM.. .Professor of the English Language
and Literature
Virgil Prettyman, A.M., Pd.D Principal of the Horace Mann
High School
Richard Elwood Dodge, A.M Professor of Geography
Charles Earl Bikle, A.M Adjunct Professor of Mathematics
James Earl Russell, Ph.D., LL.D. .Barnard Professor of Education
Helen Kinne Professor of Domestic Science
Mary Schenck Woolman Professor of Domestic Art
'Frank Morton McMurry, Ph.D. .Professor of Elementary Education
Charles Russell Richards, B.S. Macy Professor of Manual Training
iPaul Monroe, Ph.D Professor of the History of Education
1 Absent on leave.
324
INSTRUCTORS 325
Samuel Train Dutton, A.M. .. .Professor of School Administration
Gonzalez Lodge, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Latin and Greek
Edward Lee Thorndike, Ph.D. .Professor of Educational Psychology
•Charles Hubert Farnsworth Adjunct Professor of Music
'David Eugene Smith, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Mathematics
Thomas Denison Wood, A.M., M.D. .Professor of Physical Education
Frederick J. E. Woodbridge, A.M., LL.D . .Johnsonian Professor
of Philosophy
Julius Sachs, Ph.D Professor of Secondary Education
Clyde Furst, A.M Secretary of the Faculty
George L. Meylan, M.D. . . .Adjunct Professor of Physical Education
Elijah William Bagster-Collins, KM. .Adjunct Professor of German
Maurice Alpheus Bigelow, Ph.D Professor of Biology
Frederick Henry Sykes, Ph.D Director of Extension Teaching
and Professor in Teachers College
Henry Carr Pearson, A.B . . Principal of the Horace Mann Elementary
School
Hermann T. Vulte, Ph.D Adjunct Professor of Domestic Science
John Angus MacVannel, Ph.D Professor of the Philosophy
of Education
Arthur Wesley Dow Professor of Fine Arts
John Dewey, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Philosophy
Henry Clapp Sherman, Ph.D Professor of Organic Analysis
Henry Johnson, A.M Professor of History
David Samuel Snedden, A.M. .... .Adjunct Professor of Educational
Administration
Mary Adelaide Nutting Professor of Domestic Administration
George D. Strayer, Ph.D. . Adjunct Prof essor of Elementary Education
Henry Suzzallo, Ph.D. . . .Adjunct Professor of Elementary Education
Other Officers of Instruction
Charles Prentice Benns, M.E Instructor in Machine Work
Charles Conrad Sleffel Instructor in Forging
Charles William Weick, B.S Instructor in Wood-Working
Maud March Instructor in Physical Education
William H. Noyes, A.M Instructor in Manual Training
Naomi Norsworthy, Ph.D Instructor in Educational Psychology
Mary Backus Hyde Instructor in Manual Training
William McCastline, M.D Instructor in Physical Education
Caroline Crawford Instructor in Physical Education
Patty Smith Hill Instructor in Kindergarten Education
Kate McMahon Principal of Kindergarten
Clara Barbara Kirchwey Instructor in Geography
Grace Cornell Instructor in Fine Arts
May Belle Van Arsdale, B.S Instructor in Physical Science
1 Absent on leave.
326 TEACHERS COLLEGE
Edgar Fauver, A.B Instructor in Physical Education
William Skarstrom, M.D Instructor in Physical Education
Harriet Wilde Instructor in Physical Education
Elizabeth Sage Instructor in Domestic Art
Anna M. Cooley, B.S Instructor in Domestic Art
Grace Fulmer Instructor in Kindergarten Education
Jean Broadhurst, B.S Instructor in Biology
Anna Barrows Instructor in Domestic Science
Charles F. Marple Instructor in Fine Arts
Lamont Warner Instructor in Household Art
Wyllystine Goodsell, B.S. . . .Instructor in the History of Education
Clifford Upton, A.B Instructor in Mathematics
Azubah Julia Latham, A.B Lecturer in Voice Culture
Louise Christine Sutherland Tutor in Kindergarten
Frances Elbertinb McRae, B.S Tutor in Physical Science
Margaret Maud Zerbe Tutor in Music
Eliza Benton, Ph.B Tutor in Domestic Science
Edward J. Thatcher, B.S Tutor in Manual Training
Dora Beatrice Brown Tutor in Physical Education
Jeannette Rowland Seibert, A.M Tutor in Physical Education
Clara Wheeler Tutor in Primary Methods
Aletta Van Wyck Schenck Assistant in Domestic Art
Matilda Garretson Rea Assistant in Domestic Art
Mary Theodora Whitley Assistant in Educational Psychology
Anna Pamela Brooks Assistant in Fine Arts
Romiett Stevens Assistant in Secondary Education
Mary Davis Swartz, B.S Assistant in Domestic Science
Caroline Stackpole, B.S Assistant in Biology
William Henry Boynton Assistant in Household Chemistry
Grace Marie Daschbach Assistant in Music
Mary Bull Hanckel Assistant in Fine Arts
Lecturers
Richard Morse Hodge, D.D Lecturer in Biblical Literature
Susan E. Blow Lecturer in Kindergarten Education
Ellen Henrietta Richards, A.M Lecturer in Domestic Science
Marion B. B. Langzettel Lecturer in Kindergarten Education
George Philip Krapp, Ph.D Lecturer in English
Mary Elizabeth Fiske Lecturer in Domestic Art
Officers of Administration
Frederick A. Goetze, M.Sc,
Consulting9Engineer
Lucetta Daniell,
Directress
INSTRUCTORS 327
Jambs H. Canfield, LL.D., Litt.D. (Oxon.),
Librarian of the University
Elizabeth G. Baldwin,
Librarian in Charge of Bryson Library
Rudolf Tombo, Jr., Ph.D.,
Registrar of the University
Theodora George,
Assistant Registrar, Teachers College
Isabelle L. Pratt,
Recorder
Cyrus H. Pomeroy,
Bursar
Harriet Hawley,
Secretary to the Dean
Jane Berger,
Assistant Secretary
Elizabeth B. O'Neil, A.M.,
Secretary of the Publication Bureau
TEACHERS COLLEGE SCHOOLS
Officers of Administration
James E. Russell, Ph.D., LL.D., Dean
Samuel T. Dutton, A.M., Superintendent
Horace Mann Schools
Virgil Prettyman, Pd.D Principal of High School
Henry Carr Pearson, A.B Principal of Elementary School
Kate McMahon Principal of Kindergarten
Marion Root Pratt Executive Secretary
Elizabeth Iverson Toms School Secretary
Bertha Warner Seeley Secretary to Principal of High School
Cora May Geer Secretary to Principal of Elementary School
Valeria Inez Merrill Custodian of Library
Instructors and Assistants in Horace Mann Schools
Allan Abbott, A.B English
Mary Perle Anderson, B.S Biology
Kate Stuart Anthony Domestic Art
Walter Whipple Arnold, A.M Latin
Charles McCoy Baker, A.M Latin
Helen Bartlett Baker, A.B English
Charles Prentice Benns, M.E Machine Work
Charles Earle Bikle, M.A Mathematics
328 TEACHERS COLLEGE
Frank Elbert Brooks, A.B French
Mrs. Marie Karcher Brooks French
Elizabeth Rhees Butler, A.B History
Mary Edwards Calhoun, M.A English and History
Otho Grandford Cartwright, M.A History
Mary Denison Chesbrough Physical Training
Mme. Cecile Freese French
Arthur Tapley French, B.S Mathematics
Henry Rozalvin Gardner, A.M Latin and Greek
Harriet Garton Music
Mary Brownson Gilmore, Ph.B History
William Helmuth Gohdes, A.B German
Cora Olive Goldthwait, A.B English
Fannie Haefelin, B.S German
Edward Franklin Hauch, B.A German
George Thomas Holm Swimming
Alexander James Inglis, A.B Latin
Clara Barbara Kirchwey Geography
Emma Lenore MacAlarney, B.S English
Egbert Eugene MacNary Wood-Working
Eugenie Menut French
James Franklin Millis, A.M Mathematics
John Duele Xeitz, A.B., M.E. . ..Special Teacher for Delinquent Pupils
Lilla Anne Nourse Drawing
Albert F. Reed, A.M Latin
William Fox Roantree, A.B Mathematics
J. Thacher Sears, A.B Mathematics
Charles Conrad Sleffel Forging
Homer Waldo Spiers, A.B Physical Training
Karl Burwell Ullman, A.B Physical Training
Clifford Brewster Upton, A.B Mathematics
May Belle VanArsdale, B.S Chemistry and Physics
Charles William Weick, B.S Wood-Working
Mrs. Elizabeth Marion Wheelock Latin
Laura Brainard Whittemore Domestic Science
Roland Hugh Williams, B.S., A.M Chemistry and Physics
Clara Mabel Wheeler First Grade
Edith Cornelia Barnum First Grade
Evelyn Batchelder Second Grade
Mildred Ione Batchelder Second Grade
Theo R. Stone Third Grade
Della McCurdy Third Grade
Ida Elizabeth Robbins Fourth Grade
Florence May Marshall Fourth Grade
Mary Gertrude Peabody Fifth Grade
Lucy Dickson Fifth Grade
GENERAL STATEMENT 329
Maud Vivian Keyes Fifth Grade
Roy Adelbert Kane Sixth Grade
Mary Frederika Kirch wey Sixth Grade
Mrs. Siegried Hansen Upton Sixth Grade
Caroline Woodbridge Hotchkiss Seventh Grade
Lillian Emily Rogers Seventh Grade
Georgia Farrand Bacon, B.S Seventh Grade
Ethelwyn Miller, A.B., B.S Drawing
Helen Latham Music
Fannie Josephine Haefelin German
Lucy Hess Weiser Manual Training
Elizabeth Robb Fotheringham Physical Training
Elizabeth Cleasby Primary Grades
Olive Sophia Day Grammar Assistant
Martha Grosvenor Davis Primary Assistant
Louise Christine Sutherland Kindergarten Teacher
Julia Wade Abbott Kindergarten Assistant
Speyer School
Amy Schussler, B.S Principal
Clara Cheney James First Grade. Critic Teacher
Margaret A. Lemon Second Grade
Louise Phillips Glanton, A.B., B.S Third Grade
Mabel Caroline Russell Fourth Grade
Harriet Strong Fifth Grade. Critic Teacher
Elizabeth Johnson Sixth Grade
Anne Elma Windle Seventh Grade
Mrs. Ida Catherine Carter, L.B., A.M. .Eighth Grade. Critic Teacher
Luella Palmer, B.S Kindergarten Critic
Elizabeth Young, B.S Assistant in Kindergarten
Laura Valentine Secretary and Assistant Librarian
Nellie Harcourt Physical Education
Helen Latham Music
Egbert Eugene MacNary Manual Training
Anna Pamela Brooks, A.B., B.S Art Critic Teacher
Walter M. Mackay, A.B Physical Education
NEIGHBORHOOD WORK
Bailey Barton Burritt, A.M Director
Mrs. Lulie Wiles Robbins Social Worker
Spencer Morgan Dawkins, A.B Assistant
GENERAL STATEMENT
Teachers College, founded in 1888, and chartered by the Regents of
the University of the State of New York in 1889, became, in 1898, a
33° TEACHERS COLLEGE
part of the educational system of Columbia University. The President
of Columbia University is President, ex-of[icio, of Teachers College, and
the College is represented in the University Council by its Dean and a
representative elected from its Faculty. The College meanwhile main-
tains its separate corporate organization, and its Board of Trustees
continues to assume entire financial responsibility for its maintenance.
Teachers College is thus the professional school of Columbia Univer-
sity for the study of education and the training of teachers, taking
academic rank with the Schools of Law, Medicine, and Applied Sci-
ence. It affords opportunity for the professional training, both
theoretical and practical, of teachers of both sexes for secondary,
grammar, and primary schools, and kindergartens; of special teachers
of such technical subjects as Domestic Art, Domestic Science, Fine
Arts, Manual Training, Music, and Physical Education; and the
preparation of advanced students for work as principals, supervisors,
and superintendents of schools; as heads of academic or educational
departments in normal and teachers' training schools, and of educa-
tional departments in colleges and universities.
The following curricula are offered by the College:
i. A two-years' Professional Curriculum, leading to the degree of
Bachelor of Science in Education and the Bachelor's Diploma in
teaching, requiring for entrance the previous completion, at Columbia
University or elsewhere, of two years of academic or technical train-
ing in advance of the usual requirements for college entrance. The
work of the curriculum presents certain fundamental courses in edu-
cational psychology and the history and principles of education, a
major subject of professional and academic work, in any of the
twenty-four departments of the College, and a proportion of elective
courses chosen at will.
2. Graduate curricula for advanced students leading to the Master's
and Doctor's Diplomas in teaching and to the degrees of Master of Arts
and Doctor of Philosophy with a major subject in Education. Such
curricula provide work in Educational Psychology, the History and
Philosophy of Education, Educational Administration, Secondary
Education, Elementary Education, and in research in the methods of
teaching the various academic and technical subjects, supplemented
by courses in other parts of the University. Courses in education may
also be counted as minor subjects toward the advanced degrees, by
students primarily registered in some other part of the University.
The professional curriculum is so arranged that undergraduate
students of Columbia College and of Barnard College, and students
who are prepared to enter the junior class of either of these colleges,
may, if they desire, obtain the diploma of Teachers College at'^the time
of receiving their degree of Bachelor of Arts.
Teachers who wish to supplement previous professional training are
GENERAL STATEMENT 331
entered into these curricula with advanced standing, or into courses
grouped especially for their needs.
The Horace Mann School and the Speyer School, maintained by
Teachers College as schools of observation and experiment, include
kindergarten, elementary, and secondary classes and neighborhood
work, and offer exceptional advantages for the study of the practical
work of teaching and for the investigation of educational problems.
These schools have now an attendance of some thirteen hundred pupils.
Buildings and Equipment
The buildings of Teachers College occupy the block directly north
of the University Campus, bounded by 120th and 121st Streets,
Amsterdam Avenue and Broadway.
The Main Building, containing, in addition to its equipment for
administration and instruction, the Bryson Library — the educational
library of the University — and the Educational Museum, is adjoined
by the Milbank Memorial Building, housing a number of academic and
technical departments and containing the Memorial Chapel ; and by
the Macy Manual Arts Building, with its exceptional equipment for
the departments of Manual Training, Domestic Art, and Fine Arts.
The Frederick Ferris Thompson Memorial Building for the department
of Physical Education connects the Milbank Building on the west with
the building of the Horace Mann School. The Domestic Economy
Building, now being erected, will join the Main Building on the east.
The building of the James Speyer School is a short distance north of
the College, on Lawrence Street, near Amsterdam Avenue. Whittier
Hall, the residence for the women students of the University, is under
the control of Teachers College. The equipment of the College, includ-
ing Whittier Hall, represents an investment of approximately four
million dollars.
Scholarships, Prizes, and Honors
(see page 413)
REGISTER OF STUDENTS, 1907-08
Teachers College
Graduate Students
Candidates for the Doctor's Degree and Diploma
The following students are registered also under the Faculty of Philosophy :
Abbott, Frederick Bancroft Providence, R. I.
A.M. 1904, B. Sc. Emporia 1900
Education, Mechanical Engineering, Philosophy
Andron, Israel, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904, A.M. N. Y. U. 1907 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education
Arai, Tsuru Ichinomiya Gumma, Japan
Equivalent A.B. Japanese Woman's College 1907
Education, Psychology
Baldwin, Arthur Pond, A.M. 1902, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1876 New York City
Education, Sociology
Bard, Harry Erwin New York City
A.M. 1907, A.B. Wabash 1894 and A.M. 1898
Education, Social Economy
Barnes, Arthur Elijah, Ph.B. Union 189s and A.M. 1898 Freeport, N. Y.
Education
Brown, John Smith, Jr., Ph.B. Brown 1900 New York City
Education
Burritt, Bailey Barton, A.M. 1903, A.B. Rochester 1902 Le Roy, N. Y.
Education, Philosophy, Social Science
Cashman, Joseph Francis, A.B. Adelphi 1905 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education, English
Colwell, Rachel Hartshorne, A.M. 1905, B.S. Dennison U. 1903. . ..Granville, Ohio
Education, Chemistry, Biology, Domestic Science
Cort, Ambrose, A.B. Franklin and Marshall 1892 and A.M. 1897. . . .New York City
Education
Driehaus, Irwin William, B.S. Cincinnati 1900 Cincinnati, Ohio
Education, Physics
Eatman, Darius, A.M. 1902, A.B. North Carolina 1897 Oxford, N. C.
Education, English
Fitzpatrick, Edward Augustus, B.S. 1906, A.M. 1907 New York City
Education, Psychology
Giltner, Emmett E., A.M. 1907, A.B. Ind. 1904 Oaktown, Ind.
Education
Goldrich, Leon W Brooklyn, N. Y.
B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1894, LL.B. N. Y. U. 1897 and Pd. M. 1900
Education
Haney, John Dearling New York City
B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1893, A.M. and LL.B. N. Y. U. 1898
Education, English
Hewins, Nellie Priscilla, A.M. 1900, B.S. Cornell 1898 Elmhurst, L.I.
Education, Botany
332
GRADUATE STUDENTS 333
Hill, Lawrence Benjamin A..B. W. Va., 1906, A.M. Nebraska 1907. .McKinn, W. Va.
Education, Psychology
Hirdansky, Simon, A.M. 1906, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1899 New York City
Education, Psychology
Huntington, Susan Dickinson, A.B. Wellesley 1900 Norwich, Conn.
Education, Spanish
Jackson, George Leroy, A.M. 1907, A.B. Michigan 1906 New York City
Education, Psychology
Lee, Joseph Bolling, A.M. 1906, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Education, Psychology
McGill, Franklin Clark Claysville, Pa.
A.B. Jefferson and Washington, 1897 and A.M. 1900
Education, Psychology
Manny, Frank Addison, A.B. Michigan 1893, and A.M. 1896 New York City
Education, Philosophy
Meyer, Henry Herman New York City
A.B. German Wallace 1900, and A.M. 1903, B.D. Drew Theological 1903
Education, Psychology
Nicholson, Anne M, A.B. Leland Stanford Jr., 1904 San Jose, Cal.
Education, Philosophy
Patterson, Samuel White New York City
A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903, A.M. N. Y. U. 1906
Education, English
Paul, Francis Hugh Joseph Long Island City
A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1897. Pd.M. N. Y. U. 1902 and Pd. D. 1903
Education
Rabenort, William Louis, B.S. 1906, A.M. 1907 New York City
Education, Philosophy
Rejall, Alfred Ernst, A.B. 1906, A.M. 1907 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education, German, Psychology
Rippere, Robert Henry, A.B. Wesleyan 1905 •. Williamsbridge, N. Y.
Education
Roberts, John Stacey New York City
B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1895, Pd. M. N. Y. U. 1902 and A.M. 1903 New York City
Education
Robison, Clarence Hall, A.B. Northwestern 1895 and A.M. 1897 . . . .Piqua, Ohio
Education, Zoology, Botany
Russell, Warren Locke, A.B. Harvard 1904 and A.M. 1905 Arlington, Mass.
Education
Silberstein, Nathan, A.B. 1905 and A.M. 1906 New York City
Education
Simpson, Benjamin Roy, A.B. McMaster 1899 South End, Ontario
Education, Psychology
Snyder, Edwin Reagan, A.B. Leland Stanford Jr. 1905 San Jose, CaL
Education, Sociology
Stark, William Everett, A.B. Harvard 189s, A.M. 1901 Yonkers, N. Y.
Education
Stone, Cliff Winfield, B.S. 1904 Oshkosh, Wis.
Education, Philosophy
Sutclifpe, Allen Beekman, A.B. Trinity 1906 and A.M. 1907 .... Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Education, Sociology
Vance, Rufus Adair, A.M. 1902, A.B. Missouri Valley 1893 New York City
Education
Wharton, William Parker, A.B. 1902 and A.M. 1906 Morrisdale, Pa.
Education, English
Whitin, Ernest Stagg, A.B. 1904 New York City
Education, Social Economy
334 TEACHERS COLLEGE
Whitney, William T New York City
B.S. N. Y. U. 1901, A.M. 1902, Pd. M. 1903, Pd. D. 1904
Education
Candidates for Master's Degree and Diploma
The following students are registered also under the Faculty of Philosophy :
Adamson, Ethelwynne Mary, A.B. Smith 1906 Glens Falls, N. Y.
Education, Domestic Science
Agnew, Thomas. Jr., B.S. 1907 Bloomfield, N. J .
Education, Economics
Anderson, William Carl Robertson, A.B. New Brunswick 1906. . . .Penobsquis, Can.
Education, Psychology
Andrews, Mrs. Elizabeth Russell, A.B. Cornell, 1901 New York City
Education
Arnold, Frederick C, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Education, Physical Science
Asker, Laura, A.B. Det Kongelige Frederiks Universitet 1899. . Asker Station, Norway
Education, Mathematics
Augsbury, Earl Stone, A.B. Hamilton, 1901 New York City
Education
Auslander, Armin, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
Education, Physical Science
Bain, Archibald Watson, A.M. Glasgow, 1886 Peterhead, Scotland
Education, Psychology
Barnett, Isadore Irving, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 New York City
Education, History
Batchelor, Charles Bronk, A.B. 1906 New York City
Education
Becker, Fred Jacob A.B. 1903 Pasadena, Cal.
Education, Latin,
Benjamin, Claude Towne, A.B. Cornell 1896 New York City
Education, Psychology
Bennett, Mame Seeley, A.B. Bates 1901 Lubec, Maine
Education
Bergstein, Adolph, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
Education
Bixby, Florence Adelle South Haven, Mich.
B.S. Kalamazoo 1901 and Chicago 1903
1 Education, Mathematics
Blan, Louis Benjamin, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 190 1 Port Richmond, S. I.
Education, Sociology
Bluhm, Julius, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1899 New York City
Education
Bowdish, Lewis F., A.B. 1901 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education
Broadhurst, Ruth Lavinia, A.B. Smith 1907 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education, History
Campbell, Mary Alice, A.B. Smith, 1905 Jersey City, N. J.
Education, Sociology
Cannon, Gertrude Louise, A.B. 1907 New York City
Education, Botany
Carris, Lewis Herbert, B.L. Hobart 1898 Newark, N. J.
Education
Chamberlain, Caroline, A.B. Washington, 1901 St. Louis, Mo.
Education, History
Chrislip, Abram Elza, A.B. Nashville, 1901 West Alexander, Pa.
Education, Psychology
GRADUATE STUDENTS 335
Clark, Mary Augusta, A.B. Mt. Holyoke, 1903 Bedford, N. Y.
Education, Mathematics
Clough, Bertha, A.B. 1903 New York City
Education, Latin
Cohen, Abraham Broderick, A.B. 1906 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education
Cohn, Louis Benjamin, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 New York City
Education, Psychology
Coleman, John Garth, Ph.B. Hobart 1901 Hoboken, N. J.
Education, German
Crooker, Frederick Fostor, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1898 White Plains, N. Y.
Education, English
Curtiss, Eva Elise, A.B. Brown 1899 Bristol, Ct.
Education
Cutting, Flora Louise, B.S. 1907 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education, Mathematics
Dole, Harvey Peter, A.B. New Brunswick 1906 Sussex, N. B., Canada
Education, Psychology
Duffield, Edmund Thompson, A.B. Middlebury 1904 Whitehall, N. Y.
Education, Sociology
Duroe, Vernon E., A.B. Cornell 1896 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education, Latin
Ehnes, Morris Wellington, A.B. Ohio Wesleyan 1898 Upper Montclair, N. J.
Education
Elliott, Charles Herbert, B.S. McKendree 1907 Belleville, 111.
Education, Psychology
Fineman, Hayim, B.S. Pennsylvania 1907 New York City
Education, English
Flynn, Oscar Rogers, B. Sc. Ohio 1896 E. Orange, N. J.
Education
Franks, Clara Elsa, B.S. 1907 N. Tarrytown, N. Y.
Education, German
Gold, Emanuel, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Education
Goldwasser, David, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 New York City
Education
Harrington, Grace Aileen, B.S. 1905 Detroit, Mich.
Education, Psychology
Haynes, Alice Fenton, B.S. 1906 Englewood, N. J.
Education
Heller, William Isador, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Education
Hess, William Lyndon, B.L. Swarthmore, 1901 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education
Howard, Margarette Elizabeth, B. S. 1907 Summit, N. J.
Education Philosophy
Jenner, William A., A.B. Syracuse 1890 New York City
Education, Latin
Jewell, Isabella Emma, B.S. 1907 London, Ontario
Education, Domestic Science, Ethics
Johnson, Arthur Lacey Crawford, N. J.
Education
Johnson, Leslie Abner, B.S. St. Lawrence 1896 Gouverneur, N. Y.
Education, Physical Science
Jones, Wallace Franklin, A.B. Illinois 1907 Knoxville, 111.
Education, Psychology
Karr, Grant, Ph.D. Jena 1899 New York City
Education
;36 TEACHERS COLLEGE
Keller, Franklin Jefferson, B.S., C. C. N. Y. 1906 New York City
Education, English
Kent, Asa Raymond, A.B. Cornell 1903 Mabel, Minn.
Education
Kerr, Frank E., B.S. N. Y. U. 1896 Alpine, N. J.
Education
Kilpatrick, William Heard, A.B. Macon 1891 White Plains, Ga.
Education, Philosophy
Korev, Abraham J., B.S. N. Y. U. 1906 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education
Kuhn, Adelina, A.B. Vassar, 1904 New York City
Education
Lauderburn, Frederic Curtiss, A.B. Lehigh 1891 Worcester Mass.
Education
Lebowich, Leo, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1904 New York City
Education
Leuchs, Maximilian John Christian, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 Bronx, N. Y.
Education, Philosophy
Lindquist, Harold Silas, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1906 Bronx, N. Y.
Education, Philosophy
Lodge, Nellie, B.S. Swarthmore 1897 Philadelphia, Pa.
Education, Zoology
Lucey, Michael Henry, B.S. 1906 New York City
Education
Ludwig, Augustus, B.S. 1907 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education
McCall, Rosemary, A.B. Vassar 1898, Pd.B. Albany Normal 1899 Utica, N. Y.
Education, Latin
McCarty, Stella, A.B. Woman's College 1892 Trenton, N. J.
Education, Philosophy
McCormick, Mary Gertrude, A.B. Cornell 1906 Monticello, N. Y.
Education, Domestic Science
McDonald, Milo Francis, A.B. Adelphi 1906 Brooklyn, N. Y
Education, English
MacGibbon, Anna Kathryn, A.B. Vassar 1904 Walton, N. Y.
Education
McGrath, William Joseph, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1905 New York City
Education
McLaughlin, Pierina, A.B. 1907 New York City
Education, English
Mack, Lura M., A.B. Vassar 1905 Watertown. N. Y.
Education
Marshall, James Francis, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 Bronx, N. Y.
Education
Mascord, Elizabeth Frances, B.S. 1907 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education, Philosophy
Massell, Alexander Sashe, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1902 New York City
Education
Mattoon, Laura Isabella, B.S. Wellesley 1894 Springfield, Mass.
Education
Meek, Charles Simpson, A.B. Indiana 1891 Elwood, Ind.
Education, Psychology
Miller, William Augustine, B.S. 1907 Matawan, N. J.
Education
Moon, Ward Clinton, A.B. Amherst 1905 Piermont-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Education
Newman, Charles Augustine Paul, A.B., C. C. N. Y. 1900 Bronx, N. Y.
Education
GRADUATE STUDENTS 337
Oliver, Joseph Warren, B.S. 1906 New York City
Education, Social Economy
Pell, Edith A., A.B. Wellesley 1900 Newark, N. J.
Education, Biology
Phipps, Charles Frank, B.S. Wesleyan 1906 Montclair, N. J.
Education
Pierson, Emily Miller, A.B. Vassar 1907 Cromwell, Conn.
Education, English
Powell, Lewis Montgomery, A.B. Wake Forest 1907 Wake Forest, N. C.
Education, English]
Powers, Delmar T., A.B. Indiana 1897 Indianapolis, Ind.
Education, Sociology
Putnam, Mary Phelps, A.B. Minnesota 1902 Red Wing, Minn.
Education, Chemistry
Rambo, Susan Miller, A.B. Smith 1905 Easton, Penn.
Education, Mathematics
Randolph, Frederic Cozzens Fitz, A.B. 1907 New York City
Education
Reynolds, Virginia, B.S. 1907 Warren, R. I.
Education
Richardson, Ira, Ph.B. Central 1897 Shelbina, Mo.
Education, History
Ridlon, Hester, B.S. Chicago 1903 Evanston, 111.
Education, Domestic Science
Roberts, Edward Dodson, A.B. Cincinnati 1899 and A.M. 1907. .Cincinnati, Ohio
Education, Philosophy
Robertson, Hugh Shaw, A.B. Toronto 1889 Stratford, Ontario
Education, Mathematics
Robinson, Elizabeth, B.S. 1906 Nunda, N. Y.
Education
Rowell, Gertrude F., A.B. Leland Stanford Jr., 1901 San Jose, Cal.
Education, Philosophy
Rusk, Elizabeth, A.B. 1907 St. Joseph, Mo.
Education, Psychology
Schachtel, Elsie, A.B. 1907 New York City
Education
Schnorenberg, John R., A.B. Wisconsin 1907 Hartford, Wis.
Education
Sharlitt, Michael, A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1903 New York City
Education, English
Siegel, Morris Ely, B.S. C. C. N. Y. 1904 Tottenville, N. Y.
Education, Social Economy, History
Smith, Harold Fred, A.B. Leland Stanford Jr. 1907 Campbell, Cal .
Education, History
Smith, Roy Leon, A.B. Syracuse 1904 Freeport, L. I.
Education, History
Snyder, Arrietta, A.B. Wellesley 1893 Trenton, N. J.
Education, Esthetics
Stone, Lulu Mabel, Ph.B. Cornell 189s Brooklyn, N. Y.
Education
Swain, Ethel, B.L. California 1903 Marysville, Cal.
Education, English
Theobald, Jacob, Jr., A.B. C. C. N. Y. 1898 New York City
Education, Psychology
Thompson, Samuel Henry, A.B. Nebraska 1901 Hastings, Neb.
Education, Sociology
Tobey, Katharine Hart, A.B. Wellesley 1907 Oneonta, N.- Y.
Education, History
33% TEACHERS COLLEGE
Utterback, Tyler Elliott New York City
A.B. Centre 1891 and A.B. Kentucky 1893
Education, Sociology
Way, Abner P., B.S. Swarthmore 1898, M.D. Hahnemann 190 1 New York City
Education
Wells, Guy Fred, B.S. 1907 Oakfield, Wis.
Education, History
Widdowson, James, A.B. Juniata 1903 Dixonville, Penn.
Education, Psychology, Sociology
Wilbur, Clara Louise, B.S. 1906 Fayetteville, N. Y.
Education
Wilson, James Fyffe New York City
.B. Leland Stanford Jr. 1894, LL.B. N. Y. Law School 1904
Education
Yoxall, Ethel, B.A. Washburn 1905 Russell, Kan.
Education, English, History
Professional Students Candidates for the Bachelor's Degree and Diploma
Seniors
Abbott, Alden Harold {History) Franklin, Mass.
Appel, Frank John {German) New York City
Ayres, James J. {Grammar Grades) New York City
UBack, Elizabeth Mitchell {Mathematics) Yonkers, N. Y.
Baerd, Grace Jaquess {English) New Albany, Ind.
Baker, Byron Warren {Elementary Supervision) New York City
Ball, Daisy Anna {Mathematics) Buffalo, N. Y.
Barnes, Susie {English) Kirksville, Mo.
**B arney, Mabel Irene Orange, N. J.
Barr, Lois E. {Mathematics) Holdredge, Neb.
Barrett, Anna Louise {Kindergarten) Springfield, O
Bennett, Clara Rachel {Primary Supervision) Stroudsburg, Pa.
Bentley, Esther {Primary) New Rochelle, N. Y.
Bernkopf, Beatrice Mollis {Kindergarten) New York City
A.B., 1907
Blauvelt, Anna la Tourette {Manual Training) New Brunswick, N. J.
IIBrush, Anna Cooley {Mathematics) New York City
Burnham, Mabel Towne {English) Essex, Mass.
Cheney, George Walkley {Manual Training Supervision) Yonkers, N. Y.
Claypole, Minnie Estelle {English) Kittanning, Pa.
B.S. Grove City College 1905
*Cohen, Amelia {Domestic Science) New York City
A.B. 1906
Colligan, Eugene Aloysius {History) New York City
Condit, Jane Rafter {Biology) Verona, N.J.
**Consalus, Mrs. Frances Hamilton {Manual Training) Greenwich, N. Y.
Cooper, Helen Elizabeth {Domestic Science) Yonkers, N. Y.
Corbin, Alice May {Kindergarten Supervision) Michigan City, Ind.
Craig, Carolyn Roberta {Domestic Art) Amity, N. J.
Crane, Ella E. {History) Canandaigua, N. Y.
Cunningham, Elise Brenchaud {English) New York City
Daniel, Mary King {English) Davidson, N. C.
Davidson, Mary Elizabeth Spence {Biology) New York City
Davis, Janet Hayes {Kindergarten) Parsons, Kan.
Dement, Lucia Williams {Fine Arts) Chicago, 111.
1 1 Candidate for the A.B. Degree. * Diploma only . ** Degree only.
SENIOR CLASS 339
De Witt, Samuel Rodman (Elementary Supervision) New York City
Dollar, Feune Vida (Primary Supervision) Oshkosh, Wis.
Dullam, Ethel Pearl (Primary Supervision) Rockford, 111.
Dunlap, Mabel (Doincstic Art) Harrod, 0.
Dusenberry, Ida Smoot (Kindergarten Supervision) Provo, Utah
|| Dwyer, Eleanor Agnes (History) New York City
Earhart, Gertrude (Elementary Supervision) Duluth, Minn.
Earl, Anita Mills (Domestic Art) New York City
IIEaton, Clara Cecilia (Mathematics) New York City
Edgerton, Edward Ira (Mathematics) Franklin, N. Y.
Edwards, Austin South wick (Manual Training) Oswego, N. Y.
Edwards, Mary Josephine (Domestic Science) Emporia, Kan.
Everson, Anna Emma (Biology) Mamaroneck, N. Y.
♦Fellows, Helen Christine (Primary Supervision) Scranton, Pa.
A.M. 1907, A.B. Wilson 1906
IIFerns, Edith (Mathematics) Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Fisher, Edna Vaughan (English) Florence, Col.
Fisher, Grace (Domestic Science) Paoli, Ind .
Francis, Carolyn Louise (Mathematics) Honeoye Falls, N. Y.
Frechette, Marie Delphine (French) Plattsburgh, N. Y.
*Foote, Edmund Willard (English) New York City
A.M. Harvard 1904
Freedman, Leo (German and Latin) New York City
Friess, Lottie Lucie (German) New York City
Frishe, Helen (Primary Supervision) Louisville, Ky.
Galewski, Aaron (History) New York City
Galt, Sara Elizabeth (History) Terre Hill, Pa.
Gamble, Edith Gertrude (Kindergarten) New York'City
Glidden, Minnie Maud (Kindergarten) New York City
Grant, Mrs. Amy Allison (English) New York City
Greenwood, Daisy Grace (English) Maysville, Ky.
Grover, Ida Amberman (English) Red Bank, N. J.
Haas, Ella (Domestic Science) St. Louis, Mo.
Hackett, Katheleen (Physical Education) New York City
Hakes, Marion (Physical Science) Ilion, N. Y.
Harris, Clara Belle (Primary Supervision) Harrisville, N. Y.
*Hartman, Lois Katheryn (Domestic Science) Bozeman, Mont.
B.S. Montana Agricultural 1907
Hartzell, Ada Mary Catharine (Hospital Economics) Newport, Pa.
Hassebroek, Mamie M. (Domestic Science) Manhattan, Kan.
Hayes, Maud Ellen (Kindergarten Supervision) New York City
Heaphy, Gertrude Mary (Primary Supervision) New York City
Heatwole, Cornelius J. (Elementary Supervision) Harrisburg, Va.
Henderson, Anne Laura (Elementary Supervision) Green Bay, Mich.
Henderson, Eva Maria (Domestic Science) Berkeley, Calif.
Henderson, Nathalie (Grammar Grades) New York City
Hitchcock, Clara Delano (Kindergarten Supervision) Michigan City, Ind.
♦Hochheimer, Helen Alice (Kindergarten) New York City
A.B. 1905
Hodge, Helen Lida (Manual Training) Burlington, Vt .
Hodgson, Roberta (English) Athens, Ga.
Horne, Elsie Rutherford (Domestic Science) Plainfield, N. J.
UHouston, Jessie Ferguson (Mathematics) Orange, N. J.
Howard, Florence Louise (History) New York City
*Hudson, Clara Elizabeth (Domestic Science) New York City
A.B. 1901
|| Candidate for the A.B. degree. * Diploma only.
340 TEACHERS COLLEGE
|| Hufeland, Eleanor {Mathematics) Mount Vernon, N. Y.
|| Hufeland, Marie Augusta {Latin) Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Ireland, Elizur Ward {History) Unadilla, N. Y.
Jackson, Ellen Hunt {Latin) Tuscumbia, Ate.
Jansen, William {Mathematics) New York City
**Jefferson, (Mrs.) Isabel Douglas {Domestic Art) New York City
Jenney, Bertha {Domestic Science) Cincinnati, O.
Jinishian, Asadour John {Elementary Supervision) Marash, Aleppo, Turkey
Jones, Adele May {Domestic Art) Dayton, O.
Jones, Margaret Mordecai {Mathematics) Oxford, N. C.
Jones, Mary Ellen {Grammar Grades) Newark, N. J.
Keating, William Vincent {Grammar Grades) Brooklyn
Kelly, Katherine Hester {English) Kingston, N. Y.
Kelly, Mollie Smeallie {Domestic Science) Albany, N. Y.
Kingsbury, John Adams {Elementary) Seattle, Wash.
Kirby, Virginia Rowland {Fine Arts) Potsdam, N. Y.
Klein, Charles Louis {History) New York City
Knapp, Mrs. Elizabeth Sanborn {Manual Training) Yonkers, N. Y.
Kreiner, Lillian May {English) Newark, N. J.
Kuesel, Anna Elizabeth {German) New York City
Levene, Harry {Mathematics) New York City
Levonian, Leon John K. {Biology) Aintab, Turkey
Locke, Mrs. Ada M. {Kindergarten) New York City
Logan, Laura Rebecca {Hospital Economics) Amherst, N. S.
Lupton, Jennie Reed {Kindergarten) San Antonio, Tex.
Luth, Emilie Helen {English) New York City
MacDowell, Theodore Leander {Elementary Supervision) Philadelphia, Pa.
**McCully, May Shields {Physical Education) New York City
McVaugh, Roy {Manual Training) Hochessin, Del.
Marren, Maud Louise {English) Ocean Grove, N. J.
1 1 Marshall, Agnes Margaret {English) Elmhurst, N. Y.
Martin, Mary la Motte {English) Glenwood, N. J.
Mayman, Jacob Edward {Physical Science) Brooklyn
*Meyer, Florence Alma {Physical Education) Yonkers, N. Y.
A.B. 1905
Meyer, Mrs. Minna McEuen {German) New York City
Middleton, Florence {Biology) New York City
Milliken, Laura Goldsmith (Mrs.) {Physical Education) New York City
Mills, Lewis Sprague {Elementary Supervision) Collinsville, Conn.
Mitchell, Marianne {Fine Arts) Southhold, N. Y.
Modell, David A. {English) New York City
Moore, George Dolson {Mathematics) Middletown, N. Y.
Morrow, Eleanor Alatha {English) Allegheny, Pa.
Murdoch, Ada Mary {Manual Training) New York City
Nelson, Newman Elias {Manual Training) New York City
Nessler, Estelle C. {Domestic Art and Science) New York City
Newell, Roberta {Mathematics) New Orleans, La.
Nicholson, Jane Herbert {Primary) . . | Brooklyn
Nielsen, Kjersten {Primary) Peekskill, N. Y.
O'Kane, George E. {Grammar) New York City
Olinger, Henry Caesar {French) New York City
Orcutt, Helen Wallace {Kindergarten Supervision) Boston, Mass.
Paine, Alice May {Primary Supervision) Winona, Minn.
Parmenter, Eleanor Bertha {History) Camden, N. J.
Peyser, Ethel Rose {Domestic Science) New York City
Pollock, William Denton {English) Richmond Hill, L. I .
|l Candidate for the A.B. degree. * Diploma only. ** Degree only.
JUNIOR CLASS 341
|| Prahl, Josbphine Anna (German) New York City
Rainey, Mary Cornelia (Primary Supervision) Hudson, N. Y.
Ranger, Edna S. (Kindergarten) New York City
Rapoport, David (History) New York City
Rbesor, Mary (Physical Education) Washington, D. C.
**Reppenhagen, Leila New York City
Riblet, Grace Elizabeth (Fine Arts) New York City
A.B. N. Y. Normal College 1903
URichardson, Edith Cushing (German) New York City
Riester, Lauretta Frances (Manual Training) Buffalo, N. Y.
Rinehart, Gertrude Louise (Domestic Science) Toledo, O.
Rogers, Harrietts Shattuck. (Domestic Science) Warren, Pa.
Rogers, Louise (Kindergarten) New York City
Roura, Katharine Fancher (Grammar Grades) New York City
Russell, Grace Elfleda (Domestic Art and Domestic Science) Peekskill, N. Y.
Rydene, Alma Pauline (English) New York City
Schureman, Ethel May (Kindergarten) Fort Collins, Col.
A.B. Colorado Agricultural College 1904
Seglin, George Max (Mathematics) Bayonne, N. J.
Selvidge, Robert Washington (Manual Training) Warrensburg, Mo.
ibley, Caroline Anna (Kindergarten) Muskegon, Mich.
Simons, Lao Genevra (Matliematics) New York City
Skinner, Edna Lucy (Domestic Science) Kalamazoo, Mich.
Slaymaker, Rebecca Jane (English and History) Lancaster, Pa.
Smith, Charles Frederick (Manual Training) Cleveland, O.
Smith, Edwin Bert (History) Worcester, N. Y.
Steele, Ellen (Grammar Grades) Portland, Conn.
IISteinberg, Pauline (Biology) Elizabeth, N. J.
Steinbrenner, Elizabeth Louise (English) Lowville, N. Y.
Stock, John Walter (Latin) New York City
Stoddard, Orrie Schnedicher (Physical Science) Binghamton, N. Y.
Streibert, Ethel Katherine (Domestic Science) Ann Arbor, Mich.
A.B. Michigan 1907
Sutton, Margaret Eliza (Primary Supervision) Oshkosh, Wis.
Swartz, Annie Martha (Mathematics) Gettysburg, Pa.
A.B. Pennsylvania 1902
Thorne, Fred (Manual Training) , New York City
Townsend, Emilie (Elementary Supervision) Grand Rapids, Mich.
Voss, Edna Renard (Mathematics) Washington, D. C.
Waller, Phoebe Marshall (English) Maysville, Ky.
Webster, Sarah Emeline (Manual Training) New York City
Weeks, Florence Louise (Mathe>natics) Astoria, L. I.
White, Walter Charles Lewis (Fine Arts) New York City
Wilcox, Winifred (Primary Supervision) Yonkers, N. Y.
Williamson, Nannette Elena (Kindergarten) Muses Bottom, W. Va.
Wilson, John Reid (Elementary Supervision) Paterson, N. J.
Wilson, William Henry (Elementary) Paterson, N. J.
Wolfe, Veronica Lena (Domestic Art) New York City
Woodson, Elsie (History) Charleston, 111.
Work, Norman Porter (Manual Training) Yonkers, N. Y.
Wyckoff, Edna (German) Hightstown, N. J.
Juniors
Alexander, Sara Shorter (Kindergarten) New York City
Allen, Laura (Primary Supervision) New York City
Angell, Merton Almon (Elementary) New York City
|| Candidates for the A.B. degree. * Diploma only. **Degree only.
342 TEACHERS COLLEGE
Avent, John McDonough {History) New York City
Babb, Emily Augusta {Manual Training) Holden, Mass.
A.B. Mt. Holyoke, 1899
Balch, Flora Emma {Mathematics) Lerna, 111.
Baldwin, Bertha Nellie {Domestic Science) Chicago, 111 .
Baldwin, Edwin Franklin {Mathematics) Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Barber, Frank Weston {Grammar Grades) Wilton, N. H.
Barnes, Louise Marie Wade {History) Scranton, Pa.
Bell, Mabel Beatrice Valentine {Mathematics) New York City
Benson, Leland Ward {Mathematics) Port Jefferson, L. I.
Bernkopf, Anna {German) New York City
Bidstrup, Elsa {Physical Education) New York City
Bishop, Helen Adelia {Domestic Science) Decatur, 111.
Blodgett, Caroline Ellen {Music) Ludington, Mich.
Bonsall, Abbie Louise {Latin) Salem, O.
Boote, Mabel Louise {Physical Education) Yonkers, N Y.
Boyce, Zara McClelland {Manual Training) Schuylerville, N. Y.
Boyer, Charlotte Morrell {Fine Arts) New York City
Boyson, Christine Holmes {English) Osseo, Minn.
Brett, Anna {English) New York City
Brett, Edith Marilla {English) New York City
Briggs, Bertha Imogens {English) Dartmouth, Mass.
Bundren, Virginia {Fine Arts) Jefferson City, Tenn.
Buseck, Lena {German) Passaic, N. J.
Byrne, Mary B. C. {English) New York City
Clark, Lora Minnie {German) Cohoes, N. Y.
*Coffin, Margaret {Domestic Art) Knoxville, Tenn.
A.B. Tennessee 1900
Cohn, Emma {History) New York City
Cook, Frieda Hermina {German) Brooklyn
Coyne, Mary Agnes {Domestic Science) Yonkers, N. Y.
Creighton, Elizabeth {Manual Training) Toledo, O.
Crooks, Nellie {Domestic Art) New York City
Cruden, Gertrude {Domestic Art) New York City
A.B. Smith 1907
Denison, Isabel Noyes {Mathematics) Groton, Ct.
Deutsch, Julia {History) New York City
Dexheimer, Lora Mary {Grammar Grades) Spencer, S. D.
Downie, Isabella Helen {Physical Education) Cleveland, O.
Dunbar, Anna Augusta {Grammar Grades) Beech Island, S. C,
Dunbar, Marjory {Domestic Science) Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.
Edens, Olive Lorenda {English) Bellingham, Wash.
Eltinge, Louise {Gramtnar Grades) New York City
Farrell, Charlotte Daly {English) Rahway, N. J.
Ferrin, Florence Alma {French) Montpelier, Vt.
Fink, Albert {Biology) New York City
Forsell, Alva Elvira {Mathematics) West Brighton, S. I.
Gambier, Louise Marc {French) New York City
Garlick, Edith S. {Geography) Paterson, N. J.
Genin, May {Mathematics) Atlantic Highlands, N. J
Gerritson, Maude Brackett {History) Waltham, Mass.
Gianella, Geralda {French) New York City
Godwin, Alice Cornelia {Domestic Science) Grand Rapids, Mich.
Grant, Edith {Primary Supervision) Bangor, Me.
Gray, Inez Lucy {Fine Arts) High Falls, N. Y.
Green, Ethel Magnolia {Primary Supervision) Norns City, 111.
* Diploma only
JUNIOR CLASS 343
Gregg, Rachel Elizabeth {Primary Supervision) Citra, Fla.
Grundy, Elizabeth (Mathematics) Paterson, N. J.
Guernsey, Jessie Elizabeth (History) New York City
Hallock, Estelle Marcy (English) Tunkhannock, Penn.
Hamel, Georgiana (Geography) Newark, N. J.
Hamilton, Edith Leila (English) New York City
Hamm, Franklin Pierce (Latin) Breakabeen, N. Y.
Harrigan, Maurice (Physical Science) Canton, N. Y.
Harris, Janie Jackson (English) Florence, Ala.
Hawkins, Alfred Carey (Geography) Sewaren, N. J.
Henderson, Nan (Hospital Economics) Talladega, Ala.
Herrig, Anne Bertha (Elementary Supervision) Saginaw, Mich.
Herrmann, Hattie (Mathematics) New York City
Hetzel, Jessie Frances (Domestic Science) Stevens Point, Wis.
Howard, Ida Miller (History) Pulaski, Va.
Howland, George F New York City
Irving, Sylvia (Grammar Grades) New York City
Jackson, Anna Morris (Domestic Science) New York City
Jessup, Harriet Foster (Domestic Science) Piermont, N. Y.
Johnson, Elizabeth Frances (Domestic Science) Cincinnati, O.
A.B. Cincinnati 1S96
Jones, Susie Markham (History) Waco, Tex.
Kempf, Emilie M. (Pritnary) Newark, N. J.
Kemna, Charlotte (Domestic Art) Larchmont, N. Y.
King, May Helen (Domestic Science) Oakland, Cal.
Kirchberger, Elsa (German) New York City
Koehler, Bertha Katrina (Kindergarten) Rutherford, N. J.
Lawson, Gertrude Pringle (Domestic Science) New York City
Lee, Alice (Primary) Milton, Mass.
Lee, Edwin Henry (Mathematics) Tuskegee, Ala.
Lingg, Amalie Sophie (German and French) Tompkinsville, S. I.
Linn, Paul Hang (Grammar Grades) Canton, China
Lucas, Jannette May (History) New York City
Lynch, George Aloysius (History) New York City
McCloskey, James Harvey (Manual Training) Spokane, Wash.
McCully, Florence Marie (Domestic Art) New York City
McCune, Grace (Latin) Troy, N. Y.
McIlroy, Samuel Hugh (Elementary Supervision) Newark, N. J*
McKinley, Virgil Parks (Manual Training) Troy, Ala.
McLaughlin, Elizabeth Browne (Domestic Science) Cincinnati, O.
MacLear, Martha (Primary Supervision) Wilmington, Del.
Mann, Clara Fitzgerald (History) Mount Vernon, N. Y.
**Marsh, Della (Domestic Science) Fort Collins, Col.
Martin, Florence Jane (Kindergarten) New York City
Martini, Augusta (German) New York City
Mathes, Fannie Pendexter (English) Durham, N. H.
Mathews, Andrea Warwick (English) Lewisburg, W. Va.
Meeker, Grace V. (Manual Training) Roseland, N. J.
Merritt, Eelizabeth (Primary Supervision) Duluth, Minn.
Meyer, Sophie Margaret (English) San Rafael, Calif.
Miller, Maria Rice (English) Dennisville, N. J.
Mombert, Anne Theodora (German) Paterson, N._J.
Monsky, Joseph (German) New York City
Moore, Henry yZE-Lsox (Manual Training) Pittsburg, Penn.
Moriarty, Mary Lillian (English) ... . S. Manchester, Conn.
** Degree only.
344 TEACHERS COLLEGE
Morrison, Carolyn Elizabeth {Grammar Grades) South Orange, N. J.
Morrissey, Alice Irene {Physical Education) New York City
Murchie, Maude Irene {Domestic Science) Nevada City, Calif.
Murray, Lewis Hamilton {Elementary Supervision) Baltimore, Md.
Murtland, Cleo {Geography) Newark, N. J.
Nelken, Augusta {Elementary Supervision) Natchitoches, La.
Neville, Eleanor Stevens New York City
O'Brien, Mary Brennan {Domestic Science) New York City
O'Gorman, James Michael {Elementary Supervision) Oswego, N. Y.
O'Keefe, Louise Langley {Biology) New York City
Oldham, Maud {English) Salem, Mass.
Outterson, Bessie Ellen {English) East Stroudsburg, Pa.
Owens, Julia Louise {Latin) Ridgefield, Conn.
Palmer, Frank W. {Mathematics) East Meredith, N. Y.
Perham, Bertha Ellen {Domestic Science) Lestershire, N. Y.
Planer, Clara Helene, Mrs. {German) Hoboken, N. J.
Platto, Cassandra Chandler {Primary) Baltimore, Md.
Poland, Ethel Elizabeth {Kindergarten) Newark, N. J.
Potter, Grace R. {Primary) Whitewater, Wis.
Pratt, Helen Louise {Biology) Bridgeport, Conn-
Procknow, Charlotte S. {English) Port Chester, N. Y.
Puorro, Michael {Biology) New York City
Smith, Bessie Helmer {Kindergarten) Yonkers, N. Y.
Regan, Michael Francis {Physical Science) Winthrop, N. Y.
Reid, Mary Jane {Domestic Science) Toccoa, Ga.
Richards, Elizabeth May {English) Nevada City, Calif.
Richmond, Lillie {Elementary Supervision) Bethel, Conn.
Rogers, Juliet Oakes {Domestic Science) Carthage, N. Y.
Schmidt. Marie Lucile {German) Avoca, la.
Schwenker, Charlotte Elizabeth {History) New York City
Seager, Anna Luella {Elementary Supervision) Brockport, N. Y.
Seekell, Grace Edith {Elementary Supervision) Grand Rapids, Mich.
Sellers, Beatrice Marie {Biology) New York City
Shaw, Ruth Cornelia {Geography) Honolulu, T. H.
Sherwood, Winifred {Kindergarten) Iowa City la.
Shoemaker, Isabel Olive {Mathematics) St. Cloud, Minn.
Sigafus, Anna Emily {History) Stroudsburg, Pa.
Simmons, Margaret Moe {Kindergarten Supervision) New York City
Singer, Emma Annetta {History) E. Stroudsburg, Pa.
Sinsabaugh, Mary Mould {English) Montgomery, N. Y.
Smart, Alice Madeleine {Physical Education) New York City
Smith, Edith Ives {Physical Education) Bridgeport, Conn.
Smith, Frances Yancey {English) Charlotte C. H., Va.
Stamm, Caroline Louise {German) Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Stanley, Anne Abernethy {Elementary Supervision) Perth, Ont.
Stephens, Isabel Mary {Physical Education) Atlanta, Ga.
Stiles, Bertha Crane {Primary Supervision) Cedar Falls, la i
Strope, Alice {Physical Education) Marlborough, N. Y.
Suffbrn, Arthur Elliott {History) Corning, N. "V
Taggart, Leon De Witt {Mathematics) Lake Delaware, N. Y •
Townsend, Cornelia {Primary Supervision) Odessa, Del.
Trottier, Theophile {French) New York City
Tuchton, Isabelle Baird {History) Wilmington, Del.
Tupper, Harriet Akin New York City
Twaddle, Hugh W. {Manual Training) Ossining, N. Y-
Underhill, Anna {Latin) New York City
Vinson, Byrd {Domestic Science) New York City
SECOND YEAR CLASS 345
Waite, Mary Gloyd (.Kindergarten) Newark, N. J.
Waring, Reberta Amanda {Physical Education) Baltimore, Md.
West, Claude Lorraine (Elementary Supervision) Newark, N. J.
Wiley, William H. (Physical Science) N. Tarrytown, N. Y.
Williams, Bessie Potter (Kindergarten) New York City
Winchell, Cora Marguerite (Domestic Art and Science) Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Winchell, Florence Ella (Domestic Art and Science) Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Wiseman, Joseph Scott (Manual Training) Oakhurst, N. J.
Wolfe, Veronica Lena (Domestic Art) New York City
Wright, Carile Hanford (Domestic Science) Summit, N. J.
Wright, Eva (Grammar Grades) Oneonta, N. Y-
Zobel, Amelia Runge (German) New York City
Candidates for Special Diploma or Certificate
SECOND YEAR
Adams, Henriette (Domestic Art) South Orange, N. J.
Adams, Kathleen (Manual Training) Upper Montclair, N. J.
Amy, Ernest Cleaves (Manual Training) New York City
Augur, Villa (Kindergarten Supervision) Los Angeles, Cal.
Baker, Mary Elliff (Kindergarten) Closter, N. J.
Baldwin, Mary Florence (Domestic Science) Grand Rapids, Mich.
Baranoff, Reva (Primary) New York City
Barnard, Ida Crawford New York City
Barnett, Nellie Mary (Manual Training) Bellingham, Wash.
Bishop, Fannie Arnold (Kindergarten) Norwich, Conn.
Bockee, Maria P. (Fine Arts) Amenia, N. Y.
Brewer, Annie Taylor (Elementary Supervision) Anniston, Ala.
Brewer, Mrs. Margaret Dryden (Fine Arts) Chicago, 111.
Briggs, Annie Bennett (Kindergarten) East Orange, N. J.
Budinich, John (Physical Education) Coquimbo, Chili
Burdick, Edith May (Kindergarten) Orange, N. J.
Campbell, Nelle (Domestic Science) Upper Montclair, N. J.
Campbell, Susan Edith (Manual Training) Decatur, 111.
Campbell, Viola Hortense (Domestic Science) Yonkers, N. Y.
Capron, Bess Adelaide (Domestic Science) Freeport, 111.
Chamberlin, Marjorie (Fine Arts) Bloomington, 111.
Chandler, Helen Clark (Fine Arts) Berkeley, Cal.
Coates, Gladys (Domestic Art) New York City
Cobb, Ethelyn Pratt (Fine Arts) Titusville, Pa.
Converse, Mary (Domestic Science) Hammond, La.
Dailey, Frances Averill (Music) Englewood, N. J.
Decker, Katherine Anna (Hospital Economics) Girard, Pa.
Denton, Emma (Domestic Science) St. Louis, Mo.
Dolfinger, Edna (Fine Arts) Louisville, Ky.
Duncan, Mabel Harrison (Fine Arts) New York City
Evans, Pearley Ida (Kindergarten) Coffeyville, Kans.
Feagin, Alma (Grammar Grades) Birmingham, Ala.
Ferrigan, Mary Sloane (Domestic Art) New York City
Garrison, Charlotte Gano (Kindergarten Supervision) Cincinnati, Ohio
Harcourt, Elizabeth (Hospital Economics) Guelph, Ont.
Harrington, Evalina (Kindergarten Supervision) Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Harrison, Anna C. (Kindergarten) Chatham, N. J.
Haskell, Amy (Kindergarten) Bath, N. Y-
Hayes, Anna Gibb (Hospital Economics) New York City
Healy, Florence M. (Physical Education) New York City
Hedges, Anna (Domestic Science) Waverly, N. Y.
346
TEACHERS COLLEGE
Hollister, Ethel Mae {Domestic Art) Goleta, Calif.
Hubbard, Mary Belle (Domestic Science) Marine City, Mich.
Humann, Otto Victor (Fine Arts) Chicago, 111.
Humfeld, Emma Wilhelmina (Domestic Art) Kansas City, Mo.
Humphrey, Jane Agnes (Domestic Science) Lansing, Mich.
Hyde, Blanche Evelyn (Domestic Art) Newton, Mass.
Ingalls, Harriette Augusta (Primary Supervision) Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
Jacobson, Sadie Lila (Domestic Art) New York City
Johnson, Mary Hunter (Kindergarten) Mt. Sterling, Ky.
Kingsbury, Louise Cline (Domestic Art) New York City
Larter, Helen Matilda (Kindergarten) Kingston, N. Y.
Leiby, Eva Viola (Domestic Science) Ellendale, N. D.
Lobdell, John Nathan (Manual Training) Potsdam, N. Y.
Long, Alma Irene (Domestic Art) New Haven, Conn.
McKeen, Elizabeth (Domestic Science) Easton, Pa.
McNally, Katherine Mary (Kindergarten) New York City
Macneil, Adela Robey (Fine Arts) Pasadena, Cal.
Manlove, Myra Bell (Fine Arts) Oakland, Cal.
Merriam, Elizabeth (Kindergarten) New York City
Metcalf, Martha Lois (Domestic Science) Indianapolis, Ind.
Miller, Mary Emma (Fine Arts) Strausburg, Pa.
Moeller, Sophie Agnes (Domestic Science) New York City
Murray, Anna (Fine Arts) Saltsjobaden, Sweden
Nathans, Mrs. Annabel Joseph (Fine Arts) New Orleans, La.
Nichols, Dorothy Mott (Kindergarten) East Orange, N. J.
Niswanger, Lecca (Kindergarten)
Opperman, Gertrude (Kindergarten) Michigan City, Ind.
Otis, Edward King (Fine Arts) Worcester, Mass.
Paul, Elsa M atie (Grammar Grades) Henderson, Iowa
Pernessin, Noemi (Fine Arts) New York City
Phipps, Carrie Elizabeth (Fine Arts) Cambridge, Mass.
Pinckney, Marie Louise (Fine Arts) Minnetonka Beach, Minn.
Pitner, Ina Klosking (Domestic Science) ' Evanston, 111.
Ramsay, Mary (Kindergarten) Jersey City, N. J.
Reinhold, Carrie Kurtz (Domestic Art) New York City
Rich, Louise Eleanor, (Kindergarten) Williamsport, Pa.
Ring, Helen Margaret (Kindergarten) Nantucket, Mass.
Robbins, Florence Seeley (Fine Arts) Goshen, N. Y.
Robinson, Caroleen (Kindergarten Supervision) Saginaw, Mich.
Rodes, Frances Louise (Fine Arts) Roanoke, Va.
Roome, Ada Hamilton (Physical Education) New York City
Ryan, Elizabeth Frances (Domestic Science) Muskegon, Mich.
Sabourin, Mary Lillian (Fine Arts) Arlington, N. J.
Sherman, Dorothy (Fine Arts) Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Shoninger, Edna (Fine Arts) Chicago, 111.
Smith, Bessie Helmer (Kindergarten) Yonkers, N. Y.
Spingler, Augusta (Kindergarten) Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Staples, Helen Ford (Primary Supervision) Winona, Minn.
Steele, Anne Tate (Primary) Kansas, 111.
Stewart, Judson Lloyd (Manual Training) Galion, O.
Story, Mary (Manual Training) Oakland, Cal.
Stroud, Carrie Estelle (Fine Arts) Asbury Park, N. J.
Suydam, Sara Marie (Fine Arts) Ridgefield, N. J.
Thomas, De Rossette (Domestic Science) San Antonio, Tex.
Thomson, Jennie Lloyd (Kindergarten) Highwood, N. J.
Tripp, Lucy Emeline (Fine Arts) Mt. Pleasant, Mich.^
Troeger, Elisabeth Emily (Fine Arts) Charles City, la.
FIRST YEAR CLASS 347
Troy, Lota Lee (Fine Arts) Greensboro, N. C.
Vail, Edna (Primary) Hamden, N. Y.
Vandkrbilt, Sadie B. (Domestic Science) New York City
Wadswouth, Ida Carol (Domestic Science) Grand Junction, Col.
Walllace, Howard Hostford (Manual Training) New York City
Wheeler, Mabel Hubbard (Kindergarten Supervision) Cleveland, O.
Willcox, Mary St. John (Domestic Science) Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Wills, Ella Gardner (Kindergarten) Denver, Col.
Winter, William Edward (Manual Training) Williamsport, Pa.
FIRST YEAR
Allen, Bessie May (Domestic Science) Castalia, la.
Arbus, Caroline Marion (Domestic Art) Springfield, Mass.
Austin, Kate Lillian (Physical Education) New York City
Avery, Edna Irene (Domestic Art) Tacoma, Wash.
Baker, Nellie Beatrice (Manual Training) Honolulu, Hawaii
Banks, Venie Mae (Fine Arts) Sparrow Bush, N. Y.
Barnes, Marie (Kindergarten) Fargo, N. D.
Baldt, Laura Irene (Domestic Art) Philadelphia, Pa.
Baumert, Christine (Music) New York City
Baxter, Emily Priscilla (Kindergarten) Highwood, N. J.
Becker, Bertha Madelain (Domestic Art) New York City
Beecher, Hadassah Candee (Domestic Science) Redlands, Cal.
Blair, Alice Evans (Domestic Art) Peoria, 111 •
Blake, Cornelia Douglas (Manual Training) Talladega, Ala
Brooks, Mrs. Helen Bryce (Domestic Art) Toledo, O.
Brown, Bertha E. (Manual Training) Byron, N. Y.
Brown, Helen Margaret (Domestic Science) Indianapolis, Ind.
Brown, Lucile Annette (Domestic Art) Sedalia, Mo.
Bryan, Edward H. (Elementary Supervision) Sargentsville, N. J.
Bucher, Isabel Hasel (Manual Training) Baltimore, Md.
Buemming, Charlotte Adam (Domestic Art) New York City
Butler, Helen Rose (Kindergarten) New York City
Butler, Marie Evelyn (Kindergarten) New York City
Caine, Blanche Elsie (Domestic Science) ' 'Logan, Utah
Catton, Jessie E. (Hospital Economics) Constantine, Mich.
Chubb, Eva Irene (Manual Training) Schuylersville, N. Y.
Coeke, Hilda May (Fine Arts) Berkeley, Cal.
Correll, Ethel H. (Kindergarten) Osaka, Japan
Coleman, Lucy Singleton (Kindergarten) Richmond, Va.
Coyle, Clara Vanderhoof (Kindergarten) Glen Ridge, N. J.
Crane, Blanche Harrison (Kindergarten) Montclair, N. J.
Davis, Ruth Wilbur (Physical Education) Minneapolis, Minn.
Dickey, Alta Verona (Domestic Art) Montclair, N. J.
Diemer, Caroline May (Manual Training) Rochester, N. Y.
Dobbs, Ella Victoria (Manual Training) Pasadena, Cal.
Dorland, Bonnie Belle (Physical Education) Arlington, N. J.
Emery, Julia Jordan (Physical Education) Kirkwood, Ga.
Evans, Margaret (Domestic Art) Kent, O.
Farnum, Annie Florine (Physical Education) New York City
Field, Nell C. (Domestic Art) Anoka, Minn.
Forman, Eleanor Brynberg (Grammar Grades) Elsmere, N. Del.
Fox, Katherine Anastasia (Grammar Grades) Chicago, 111.
Grant, Anna (Domestic Science) Salt Lake City, Utah
Greenewald, Ruth Josephine (Domestic Art) Bradford, Pa.
Harris, Stella Case (Manual Training) Springfield, Mo.
Hendrian, August William (Physical Education) Detroit, Mich.
348
TEACHERS COLLEGE
Hess, Balbina Marcella (Primary Supervision) Glen Ullin, N. D.
Hinshelwood, Mabel (Nature Study and Geography) Jamesburg, N. J.
Holman, Bessie Frances (Domestic Art) Indianapolis, Ind.
Hooper, Minnie Louise (Kindergarten) North River, N. Y.
Hutchins, Anna Peddie (Domestic Science) Lawrence, N. Y.
Jenkins, Elizabeth Blaine (Fine Arts) Washington C. H., O.
Judd, Edwin Ferris (Manual Training) Easthampton, Mass.
Kellsey, Jane Douglas (Kindergarten) Englewood, N. J.
Kerns, Fannie Maria (Fine Arts) Los Angeles, Calif.
Kimball, Ruth (Kindergarten) Fitchburg, Mass.
Kingsbury, Agnes Palmer (Kindergarten) Webster, Mass.
Kirkley, Florence (Physical Education) Toledo, Ohio
Kurtz, Alice Tintoretto (Hospital Economics) New York City
Leavenworth, Katharine Elizabeth (Kindergarten) Eaton, N. Y.
Lee, Florence Margaret (Domestic Art) Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Leggett, Anna Lee (Domestic Science) Altamont, N. Y.
Lincoln, Mary Bruce (Kindergarten) Grand Rapids, Mich
Loring, Stella Gifford (Hospital Economics) Orange, N. J.
Lowrey, Miriam Stetlar (Kindergarten) New York City
Lowes, Mary Frances (Hospital Economics) Muskegon, Mich.
McGowin, Margaret Odell (Domestic Art) Pittsburgh, Pa.
McGrath, Estelle Marie (Kindergarten) Madison, N. J.
McMillan, Mary Eliza (Fine Arts) Red Springs, N. C.
Mabrey, Helen Riedell (Domestic Science) Norwich, Conn.
Manchester, Mrs. Melinda J. (Domestic Science) Milford, N. H.
Man well, Theodosia Parker (Hospital Economics) East Milton, Mass.
Martin, Mary Mitchell (Manual Training) Florence, Ala.
Massee, Edith Marion (Domestic Science) Milwaukee, Wis.
Masters, Margaret Parvin (Primary) Marlton, N. J.
Mathews, Mary Estelle (Fine Arts) New York City
Matteson, Claire Louise (Domestic Science) Decorah, Iowa.
Miller, Mary Clara (Domestic Art) Pottstown, Pa.
Miller, Willa Mabelle (Domestic Science) Nineveh, Va.
Milmoe, Julia Agnes (Hospital Economics) Nyando, N. Y.
Minahan, Mary Elizabeth (Domestic Science) Calumetville, Wis.
Mitchell, Irene Theodora (Kindergarten) Boonton, N. J.
Mitchell, Margaret Johnes (Domestic Art and Science) Philadelphia, Pa.
Morris, Nan Hynson (Domestic Science) Edgemoor, Del.
Murphy, Helen Frances (Domestic Art) Muskegon, Mich.
Murphy, Ellen Jane (Elementary Supervision) Bamberg, S. C.
Nash, Lily (Primary Supervision) Glen Elder, Kan.
Nassau, Mary Brunette Foster (Physical Education) Trenton, N. J.
O'Reilly, Mary Genevieve (Kindergarten) Elizabeth, N. J.
Parmelee, Mary (Dotnestic Art) Toledo, O.
Pearson, William Richmond (Physical Education) New York City
Pendleton, Constance (Fine Arts) Bryn Athyn, Pa.
Phillips, Caroline Dorothea (Fine Arts) High Bridge, N. J.
Reindollar, Mary Blanche (Elementary Supervision) Baltimore, Md.
Rice, Edith Grace (Elementary Supervision) Baltimore, Md.
Robbins, Sue (Primary) Lexington, N. C.
Rue, Marguerite Andrew (Manual Training) Freehold, N. J.
Rumbaugh, Roxy Esther (Kindergarten) Ely, Nev.
Sasnett, Martha R. (Domestic Science) Savannah, Ga.
Schuler, Malcolm William (Manual Training) Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Schwartz, Catherine Cecile (Kindergarten) New York City
Schwarz, Helen (Fine Arts) New York City
Shelley, Lillian (Domestic Art) Dawn, O.
UNCLASSIFIED STUDENTS 349
Shively, Mabel Roubtte (Fine Arts) Napa, Cal .
Simpson, Susan Alison (Fine Arts) Elmira, N. Y.
Smith, Berta Tyler (Fine Arts) Cairo, 111.
Smith, Bessie Gordon (Kindergarten) East Orange, N. J.
Smith, Gertrude Morris (Domestic Science) Grand Rapids, Mich.
Smith, Mary Lois (Manual Training) Westfield, N. J.
Snider, Isaac (Manual Training) New York City
Snook, Nellie A. (Elementary Supervision) S. Lebanon, O.
Stadler, Blanche Fannie (Kindergarten) New York City
Storer, Helen Maye (Manual Training) Susquehanna, Pa.
Stringfellow, Ethel Grey (Primary) Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Sunderland, Belle (Domestic Science) Cleveland, O.
Swenson, Sadie Johnnette (Domestic Art) Clifton, Tex.
Ten Eick, Cora Agnes (Domestic Art) New York City
Thomas, James J., Jr. (Fine Arts) Raleigh, N. C.
Todd, Nell Margaret (Fine Arts) New York City
Trowbridge, Myra Charlotte (Domestic Art) Toledo, O.
Tully, Mary V. (Domestic Art) New York City
Van Vosburgh, Lillian May (Kindergarten) Baltimore, Md.
Wales, Mary Alice (Fine Arts) Monson, Mass.
Ward, Elizabeth Harrison (Fine Arts) Oneonta, N. Y.
Weldin, Winifred (Kindergarten) Edgemoor, Del.
Wellington, Louie (Domestic Science) Oxford, Mass.
Whitcomb, Eleanor (Domestic Art) Indianapolis, Ind.
Wile, Helen (Kindergarten) Rochester, N. Y.
Willett, Ethel Mitchell (Hospital Economics) Needham, Mass.
Williams, Ina (Primary) Columbus, Ga.
Williams, Susan Elizabeth (Elementary) New York City
Wilmot, Ruth Alta (Domestic Art) Grand Rapids, Mich.
Witcher, Lois Wise (Manual Training) Athens, Ga.
Wooster, Minnie Amelia (Fine Arts) Newport, N. V.
UNCLASSIFIED STUDENTS
Barnard, Ida Crawford New York City
Bazinet, Angeline New York City
Berganimi, Rachel New York City
Blanchard, Caroline Dean Salt Lake City, Utah
Cole, Sibyl Osborn Englewood, N. J.
Collins, Annie Eaton New York City
Gammon, Susie Marie Cedartown, Ga.
Godfrey, Lydia Boker Lake Placid Club, N. Y.
Goodrich, Mary Murray Lee, Mass.
Hansford, Frances Pierce New York City
Heller, Mary Elizabeth Eastport, Md.
Hill, Helen Grant New York City
Holmes, Amy Elizabeth New York City
Komoll, Cornelia Tower Middletown, N. Y.
Leonard, Caroline Wiltse Bayonne, N. J.
Littell, Elizabeth Duval New York City
Nolan, Annie A New York City
Phelps, Wilhelmina W Utica, N. Y.
Pollard, Gertrude New York City
Pribble, Evalin Elizabeth Anoka, Minn.
Russell, Martsa Montague New York City
Sackett, HelenA Nutley, N. J.
Shaffner, Carrie Lisetta Winston-Salem, N. C .
350 TEACHERS COLLEGE
Siewers, Grace Louise Winston-Salem, N. C.
Simar, Therese Eva New York City
Smith, Minnie Isabel New York City
Solomon, Clara Belle Charleston, S. C.
Thompson, Gardo Port Colburne, Can.
Tomes, Margaret Anne Washington, D. C.
Trapp, Metha Trenton, N. J.
Van Vort, Ray Virginia Richmond, Va.
Wallace, Lucy Bryant New York City
Weaver, Raymond Melbourne New York City
Wessa, Alice New York City
Whittemore, Elizabeth Browning New York City
Willis, Elizabeth Mary Augusta, Ga.
SUMMER SESSION, 1907
The following matriculated students, not in residence during the academic year
1907-8, were in attendance at the Summer Session of 1907.
Abbott, Emily Mildred Mansfield, O
Abell, Julia Lorania Chicago, 111.
Ackles, Mrs. Frank H Chiclayo, Peru
Allebach, Annie J East Orange, N. J.
Allen, DeWitt Clinton Hartford, Ct .
Allen, Freeman Harlow Potsdam, N. Y.
Arthur, Lucy Anne Chicago, 111.
Bachrach, Simon New York City
Bagley, Jessica Oneonta, N. Y.
Bamberger, Florence Eilan Baltimore, Md.
Barnett, D'Arcy Cornwell Cambridge, Md.
Bartlett, Mary Elizabeth Lewiston, Me.
Beha, Joseph Louis Constableville, N, Y.
Benedict, Charles Albert Port Jervis, N. Y.
Besancon, Beatrice Elizabeth Hoboken, N. J.
Blessing, Charles Winne Slingerlands, N. Y.
Breckenridge, Elizabeth Louisville, Ky.
Bridgman, Arthur Otis Lyons Falls, N. Y.
Brogden, Lautrec Cramer Kinston, N. C.
Brown, Helen Churchill Schenectady, N. Y.
Brown, Thomas Quincy Morristown, N. Y.
Byers, Alice Cary Darling, Pa.
Caldwell, Hugh Harris Charlotte, N. C.
Cameron-Morrow, Mrs. Nannie Rodeleia Fairmont, W. Va.
Camp, George Washington Villa Rica, Ga.
Cantwell, Guy Westfield, Ind.
Carney, Emma Francis LeRoy, N. Y.
Carter, Emily Barker Bellingham, Wash.
Caulfield, Bridget M. F New York City
Clark, Anna Washburn Scranton, Pa.
Clauss-Kirsten, Mrs. Martha New York City
Cohen, James Chelsea, Mass.
Cook, Anna Dolores St. Louis, Mo.
Cornell, Hazel May Louisville, Ky.
Craig, Elizabeth Jane Marion Centre, Pa.
Crawford, Frederic Mull Williamsburg, Va.
Crawford, Richard McLeod Williamsburg, Va.
Cunningham, Mary Agnes St. Paul, Minn.
Curtiss, Maude Louise Utica, N. Y.
SUMMER SESSION 351
Dakin, Wilson Sheldon Northampton, Mass.
Daly, Ida May Washington, D. C.
Danielson, Carl New York City
Dorse y, Cynthia Laura New York City
Emmons, Miss Mary Frenchtown, N. J.
Etheridge, Pearl Huntley Hamburg, Ark.
Fitts, Ada Rose Washington, N. J.
Florez, Luis Santiago, Chile
Fordth an, Letitia Myrtle Port Arthur, Tex.
Friedman, Emanuel New York City
Gaston, Mabel Somerville, N. J.
Gifford, Susan Fairhaven, Mass.
Glenn, Elva May Walden, N. Y.
Hackney, Lillian May Morgantown, W. Va.
Halsey, Mary Charleston, S. C.
Hann, Ruth Penman Scranton, Pa.
Harvey, Elizabeth McKendru Louisville, Ky.
Hewins, Nellie Priscilla Elmhurst, L. I.
Hobbs, Jesse Vinton Baltimore, Md.
Hoffmeier, Daisy Edna Lancaster, Pa.
Hollingsworth, Louise Margaret Scotch Plains, N. J.
Hosterm an, John Scholl Philipsburg, Pa.
Hughes, Sara Monita Ridgewood, N. J.
Hutchinson, James Howard East Bloomfield, N. Y.
Hyde, Martha New York City
Johnson, Grace Frances Washington, D. C.
Johnson, Hannah May Washington, D. C.
Johnson, Worthy Point Peter, Ga.
Kalb, John Albert Milburn, N. J.
Keagey, Esther Ocean Grove, N. J.
Kikwood, Ara West Hoboken, N. J.
Koch, Charles Dison Philipsburg, Pa.
Lamb, Mary Adaline Brighton, Col.
Leitner, Almena Bartow, Fla.
Linville, Eva Boyle Sheridan, Mo.
Locke y, Joseph Byrne Pensacola, Fla.
Loeb, Josephine Albany, N. Y.
Lovejoy, Sara C Farmington, Ct.
Lynd, Margaret Louise New York City
McFarland, Mary Elizabeth New York City
McKinle y, James Gordon New York City
MacGregor, Kate Miller Hilburn, N. Y.
Mack, Mary Smith Denver, Col.
Maddock, Catharine May Murfreesboro, Tenn.
Main, Estella New York City
Maetze, Pauline Bellville, Tex.
Mason, Kate Juliette Cleveland, O
Merrell, Ruth Agawam, Mass.
Michaelson, Klara Marie Minneapolis, Minn.
Miller, Edward Alanson Obejlin, O.
Mischlich, Adolph New York City
Morelock, Oliver James Lockport, N. Y.
Morgan, M. Ella Washington, D. C.
Morley, Sarah Agnes Cleveland, O.
Morris, Frederick Kuhne New York City
Morse, Louis Theodore New York City
Neff, Isabel Howard Cincinnati, O.
352 TEACHERS COLLEGE
Newbury, Maud Christine Woolford's, Md.
Nosworthy, Emily New York City
Owens, Annie Mary Tyrone, Pa.
Parker, Francis Pratt Newport, Minn.
Pickett, William J Worcester, N. Y.
Pierson, Harry Oradell, N. J.
Pike, Gwendoline New Rochelle, N. Y.
Pike, Lilian Mary New Rochelle, N. Y.
Polk, Annie Elizabeth Louisville, Ky.
Porter, Evelyn Louisville, Ky.
Prendergast, Katharine Irine St. Paul, Minn.
Pride, Virginia Lee Port Elizabeth, Cape Colony, S. Africa
Proudfoot, Mary Amelia New York City
Prouty, Iris Gertrude Spencer, Mass.
Quilli ard, Margaret Jacot Duluth, Minn.
Race, Henrietta V Winfield, Kan.
Rapeer, Louis Wm Minneapolis, Minn.
Reed, Joseph Ambrose Seattle, Wash»
Richardson, Alice Mary Elgin, 111.
Ries, Henry R East Stroudsburg, Pa.
Riordan, Katharine Irene New York City
Roberts, Dora Keyport, N. J.
Rose, Flora New York City
Rossen, Ellis New York City
Sands, Beatrice Salem, N. J.
Saraum, Christine Elizabeth Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Saunders, Cecilia Mabel Westfield, Mass.
Schw almeyer, Emma Maud Bartow, Fla.
Shaw, Mrs. Julia Williamson Washington, D. C.
Shelton, Francis Veronica New York City
Sherman, Dorothea Foote Ash Grove, Fairfax Co., W. Va.
Sherrard, Elizabeth Matthews Crozet, Va.
Sime, George Brown New York City
Sliney, Katherine Agnes St. Paul, Minn.
Smith, Annie Hopfecker Pocantico Hills, N. Y.
Smith, Cecile Emmorine Westchester, Pa.
Smith, Henry Lester Bloomington, Ind.
Sperry, George Thomas New York City
Stanton, William Layton Scarsdale, N. J.
Steinbrenner, Louise Lowville, N. Y.
Stevens, Annie Winn Brunswick, Ga.
Storer, Helen Maye Susquehanna, Pa.
Stull, Bessie Adell Auburn, Neb.
Tamagno, Grace New York City
Tate, James Howard New York City
Thomes, Lillian Vincent Cripple Creek, Col.
Van Nostrand, Nora A New York City(
Van Rensselaer, Martha Ithaca, N. Y.
Wallace, Florence Didier Baltimore, Md.
Watkins, Catherine Rose Washington, D. C.
Wayman, Grace Louise New York City
Webb, Marquis De Madison, Ind.
Weller, Le Roy Fort Plain, N. Y.
Welles, Louise Maude South Manchester, Ct.
Westervelt, Edmund C New York City
White, Edward Nelson Acushnet, Mass.
Wilcox, Mrs. Lucia Chamberlain Cleveland, O.
Wing, Francis Herbert Gowanda, N. Y.
SUMMARY ' 353
Wynn, William Thomas Enterprise, Ala.
Zabriskie, Edward Cornell New York City
SUMMARY
Graduate Students :
Candidates for Doctor's Degree and Diploma 49
" Master's DegTee and Diploma 133
182
II. Professional Students :
Candidates for j Bachelor's Degree and Diploma, and for Special
Diplomas:
For Teaching in Secondary Schools: Biology 11, English 47, French 7,
Geography 5, German 23, History 29, Latin 9, Mathematics 35, Physical Sci-
ence 6, in Secondary Schools (major not stated) 4 , in Elementary Schools
40, in Kindergartens 72, Domestic Art 53, Domestic Science 50, Fine Arts S4.
Hospital Economics 9, Manual Training 50, Music 2, Nature-Study 1, Phys-
ical Education 28, Supervising in Kindergartens or Elementary Schools 59,
Candidates for the Bachelor of Science Degree only 4 628
810
III. Unclassified Students 45
~855
Less duplicate counts, students candidates for more than one diploma 5
Total resident registration. 850
IV. Additional matriculated students, Summer Session, 1907 15^
Net total matriculated students 1 00 7
V. Students from other parts of the University 245
Total matriculated students 1252
In addition to the above there are non-matriculated (extension) students
registered at Teachers College 1526
There are also 1012 pupils in the Horace Mann School and 220 in the Speyer School,
total 1232.
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES
Nicholas Murray Butler President
Ewen McIntyre Honorary President
Charles F. Chandler Vice-President
William Jay Schieffelin Vice-President
Herbert D. Robbins Vice-President
Terms expire 1908 Term expires iQog
William C Alpers F. W. Carpenter
Max J. Breitenbach Arthur H. Elliott
Charles S. Erb Thomas P. Cook
Leo W. Geisler, Jr. Hieronimus A. Herold
Henry Imhof Albert Plaut
Term expires igio
Otto P. Amend Dudley T. Larimore
Adolph Henning Robert S. Lehman
Reuben R. Smith
Clarence O. Bigelow Treasurer
Thomas F. Main Secretary
Harry B. Ferguson Assistant Secretary
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
Officers of the Faculty
Henry H. Rusby, M.D Dean and ex-officio Member of the University
Council
Geo. C. Diekman, Ph.G., M.D Secretary
The Faculty
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ph.D., LL.D. (Cantab.), Litt.D. (Oxon.)
President
Charles F. Chandler, A.M., Ph.D., M.D., LL.D., Sc.D., Professor of
Organic Chemistry
Arthur H. Elliott, Ph.D., F.C.S. .Professor Emeritus of Chemistry
Henry H. Rusby, M.D Professor of Materia Medica
Virgil Coblentz, A.M., Phar.M., Ph.D., F.C.S. , Professor of Chemistry
354
GENERAL STATEMENT 355
George C. Diekman, Ph.G., M.D Professor of Pharmacy
John Oehler, Ph.G Adjunct Professor of Chemistry
William J. Gies, Ph.D Professor of Biological Chemistry, Colum-
bia University
Carlton C. Curtis, Ph.D. .Instructor in Botany, Columbia University
Anton Vorisek, Phar.D Professor of Analytical Chemistry
William Mansfield, Phar.D Acting Professor of Pharmacognosy
Clinton B. Knapp, M.D Professor of Bacteriology
Other Instructors
Curt P. Wimmer, Phar.D Instructor in Pharmacy
Frederick A. Leslie, Phar.D Instructor in Analytical Chemistry
Charles W. Ballard, Ph.C Instructor in Materia Medica
OTHER OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION
James H. Canfield, LL.D., Litt.D Librarian of the University
F. P. Keppel, A.B Secretary of the University
Rudolf Tombo, Jr., Ph.D Registrar of the University
Henry Lee Norris, M.E . . . .Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds
Virgil Coblentz, Ph.D Librarian to the College of Pltarmacy
Clara A. Kerker. .Custodian of the Library of the College of Pharmacy
GENERAL STATEMENT
The College of Pharmacy of the City of New York, founded in 1829,
chartered in 183 1, and recognized in 1879 by the Regents as part of
the University of the State of New York, became a member of the
educational system of Columbia University on July 1, 1904. The
President of the University is ex-officio President of the College of
Pharmacy, and the College is represented in the University Council
by its Dean, who is appointed by the Trustees of the College of Phar-
macy on the nomination of the President. The College, however,
maintains its separate corporate organization, and its Trustees con-
tinue to provide for its financial support.
The College of Pharmacy is thus the professional school of Co-
lumbia University for pharmacists and pharmaceutical chemists
and, as well, a valuable addition to the University's resources for
teaching and research in botany and materia medica.
The following courses of study are offered:
1. A college course, consisting of a junior and senior year, leading
to the degree of Graduate in Pharmacy, conferred by the College
independently of the University, and qualifying the graduate to meet
any examination for the position of licensed pharmacist. This course
is open, according to statute, only to persons holding the Pharmacy
356 COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
Students' Certificate, granted by the State Education Department for
15 Regents' counts or their equivalent. The work undertaken is as
follows: Junior year — physics, general and pharmaceutical chemistry,
analytical chemistry, mathematics of pharmacy, practical pharmacy,
dispensing pharmacy, botany, pharmacognosy, physiology, and toxi-
cology. Senior year — organic chemistry, inorganic and organic pharma-
ceutical chemistry, analytical chemistry, practical pharmacy, dispensing
pharmacy, materia medica, toxicology, commercial pharmacognosy,
histological pharmacognosy.
2. A University course of 2 years leading to the degree of Phar-
maceutical Chemist, conferred by the University. This course is open
only to persons holding the Regents' academic equivalent certificate
granted for 60 Regents' counts, or the corresponding certificate of
Columbia University or of the College Entrance Examination Board.
The work undertaken in this course differs from that of the College
course in being of a somewhat more advanced character, and in being
pursued through the full academic year. Part of this work is per-
formed by the medical department of the University.
3. A third or graduate course of one year, open to pharmaceutical
chemists of this or other schools of equal grade or those holding
equivalent degrees, leading to the degree of Doctor of Pharmacy.
This course is designed to fit graduates for positions as analysts and
microscopists, and for making urinary analyses, bacteriological exam-
inations, and performing other work of the kind. It consists of prac-
tical work in plant analysis, technical microscopy and bacteriology,
quantitative and organic analysis, and lecture courses in the theory
and practice of inorganic quantitative analysis, commercial organic
analysis and toxicology, and physiological chemistry.
4. A course of one year in the microscopical and chemical analysis
of foods and drugs. This course is open to all graduates of this
College, and to those of other colleges whose training has qualified
them to perform the necessary work. A Summer Preparatory Course
of twelve weeks is provided for those who, for any reason, require
training in special subjects as a preparation for the Food and Drug
Course.
5. A number of special courses of instruction have also been estab-
lished, partly for the benefit of those regular students who desire, for
any reason, to specialize in certain lines of work, and partly to provide
instruction in individual departments for those who do not desire to
take the full course. Certificates, but not diplomas, are awarded to
such students. These special courses of instruction are in phar-
macognosy, chemical analysis, advanced inorganic and organic
chemistry, and practical pharmacy.
The College is situated at 115 West 68th Street, near Columbus
Avenue, in an especially well-equipped building erected in 1894.
GENERAL STATEMENT 357
Admission
Students who are to be examined for admission will be examined
either at the Regents' examination, or at the January and September
entrance examinations of Columbia University, or of the College
Entrance Examination Board, which are held in June of each year.
(See pages 154-162.)
Method of Instruction
During the junior and senior years the instruction occupies three
days of the week, the alternate days being free for that practical
experience in the pharmacy which is required by Boards of Pharmacy.
This arrangement enables students to meet the Board requirements,
and it also provides a means of paying the expenses of a majority of
students.
Many students, under the advice of the Faculty, prefer to devote
the entire time of the second year to college work. For those so
desiring, additional instruction is provided.
In addition to lectures and laboratory work a series of recitations
or quizzes, by a corps of qualified instructors, is given to the students
in small sections.
Prizes
(See page 415)
REGISTER OF STUDENTS
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
Junior Class
Ackerman, Maurice New York City
Adams, Le Roy Plainfield, N. J.
Bauman, Jacob A Perth Amboy, N. J.
Berbert, Lyn Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Bernstein, Samuel New York City
Boehme Louis F New York City
Brady, James J Weehawken, N. J.
Brancato, Frank New York City
Branower, George I New York City
Branower, Solomon I New York City
Brett, Clarence J Newport, N. Y.
Breuer, Nathan New York City
Burstan, Jacob Middletown, Del.
Bussell, Morris New York City
Caputi, Carmello T New York City
Carson, John J Oneonta, N. Y.
Coester, Brower B Middletown, N. Y.
Cohen, Alexander New York City
Coles, Thomas, Jr Wisconisco, Pa.
Cooper, Abraham New York City
Denike, George C Ossining, N. Y.
Desanctis, Francesco New York City
Dice, Willis C Allegheny, Pa.
Di Nolfo, Leonard New York City
Edelberg, Morris New York City
Egerman, Jacob Yonkers, N. Y.
Feldman, Jaqob New York City
Friedman, Jacob New York City
Frucht, Gerald New York City
Giacalone, Vincenzo New York City
Ginsberg, William New York City
Ginsburg, David New York City
Gluckman, Harry New York City
Goldmann, [Max New York City
Gordan, Joseph New York City
Gorton, Graham F Summit, N. J.
Grodinsky, Hyman New York City
Guardi, Joseph New York City
Gussman, Lewis Brooklyn, N. Y.
Haefeli, William College Point, N. Y.
Hasan, Herman New York City
Herstfield, Alfred New York City
Hindes, Samuel New York City
Johnson, George West New Brighton, N, Y.
Kelly, Albert S Attoway, Va.
358
JUNIOR CLASS 359
Kingston, Frederick D Newburgh, N. Y.
Klebe, Kurt B New York City
Kleimann, Mortimer V New York City
Krause, Oscar E New York City
Lacovara, Anthony New York City
Levitch, Frances Brooklyn, N. Y.
Levy, Moses New York City
Limick, Seiman West Hoboken. N. J.
Loew, Morris New York City
Loewenthal, Paul New York City
Lonis, John E Frankfort, N. Y.
Lustig, Bernard New York City
McFarlane, John M Fishkill-on-Hudson, N. Y.
McManus, James P Brewster, N. Y.
Martoccio, Anthony New York City
Matera, Antonio New York City
Miller, Lionel F Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Minkin, Noah New York City
Morrison, Wilson B Lisbon, O.
Moore, William S Newburgh, N. Y.
Mundaro, Emil New York City
Muster, William New York City
Oates, Edward B Paterson, N. J.
Pachman, Louis Brooklyn, N. Y.
Pisculli, Domenico M New York City
Polonsky, Henry New York City
Ptacek, John C Oswego, N. Y.
Reed, George C Oswego, N. Y.
Regelson, Morris New York City
Rosenblum, Michael New York City
Salinitro, Nicholas New York City
Saloman, Samuel W New York City
Saphiro, Isidor New York City
Schneiderman, William New York City
Schroeder, Otto L New York City
Slowinsk y, Morris New York City
Stead, Theodore H Norwich, Conn.
Stockhoff, Herman J Rutherford, N. J.
Stoller, Samuel New York City
Strehl, Frank P Paterson, N. J.
Stroh, Henry P Jamaica, N. Y.
Tartar, Leon New York City
Taube, Julius New York City
Tow, Nicholas New York City
Tow, Siegfried New York City
Tympany, William H Stapleton, N. Y.
Weinkle, Leo H Jacksonville, Fla.
Westermayr, Frieda C. A Portchester, N. Y.
Windt, Benn New York City
Wouters, Herbert C Jersey City, N. J.
Zevie, Solomon New York City
Zimmer, Isidore Bayonne, N. J.
[97]
Junior University Students
Bean, Francis L McGraw, N. Y.
Cornish, Stanley D Carmel, N. Y.
36°
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
Etler, Jacob New York City
Golob, Max New York City
Greenwood, Samuel B Newark, N. J.
Hamilton, James L Presque Isle, Me.
Jennings, Ralph C Summit, N. J.
Katibah, Selim I New York City
Kingsbury, Earle J Little Falls, N. Y.
Krapf, Emile F New York City
Lichtenstein, Isidor New York City
Lindsley, Leon J Corry, Pa.
Matthews, Arthur T Scranton, Pa.
McBride, Charles A Rutherford, N. J.
Miner, Roddie Ocoee, Fla.
Pryor, Kenneth B I Wappinger's Falls, N. Y.
Ps aki , Constantine G New York City
Schlesinger, Malcolm L New York City
Steffens, John A Brooklyn, N. Y.
Stockhammer, Raymond J New York City
Ulnoff, Frances New York City
Weild, David Brooklyn, N. Y.
Whitehead, Frank E Morristown, N. Y.
[23 [
Senior Class
Alpers, Otto New York City
Bahr, Theodore F Jersey City, N. J.
Barth, Fred E Greenpoint, N. Y.
Bendt, George W New York City
Blatz, Louis T New York City
Block, Abraham J New York City
Bongartz, Carl G Jersey City, N. J.
Boyd, Alfred O New York City
Brecklien, Oscar L Kansas City, Mo.
Brodsky, Michael H New York City
Brooks, Fred S Schroon Lake, N. Y.
Brownell, Erwin J Mexico, N. Y.
Burroughs, Edward A New York City
Cittadini, Antonio New York City
Coleman, Byram E Boonton, N. J.
DelVecchio, Felix Newark, N. J.
Depuy, Jay Jacob Ellenville, N. Y.
Feeley, Martin J., Jr New York City
Feuereisen, Harold New York City
Finkenberg, Jerome New York City
Finkelstein, William New York City
Finn, William P Danville, N. Y.
Gaspard, Charles F. P New York City
Gesell, Hans W Hoboken, N. J.
Glatt, Clarence B Whitesboro, N. Y.
Goodwin, Joseph M So. Norwalk, Ct.
Gordon, Arthur H Marlboro, N. Y.
Guild, Max New York City
Hall, William W Baltimore, Md.
Heine, Frederick W New York City
Henggeler, John P Paterson, N. J.
Henriksen, Arthur L Brooklyn, N. Y.
Hohmann, George New York City
SENIOR CLASS 361
Hornby, Laura B. (Mrs.) Phillipsburg, N. J.
Jurgensen, Karl H New York City
Kaufman, Llewellyn M Kutztown, Pa.
Kopejzna, Joseph A Long Island City, N. Y.
Leopold, Charles H New York City
Levitow, Israel Hartford, Conn.
Lindsay, George A New York City
McCann, George W. Jr Springfield, O.
Nelson, William A Perth Amboy, N. J.
Oberle, Henry E New York City
Osborn, Eugene C Davenport, la.
Pollock, Samuel Weehawken, N. J.
Preciado, Manuel C Panama, Panama
Pullen, Clifford P Boothbay Harbor, Me.
Rabinnovitz, David San Carlos, Arizona
Ramirez, Frank J., Jr New York City
Resnick, Felix New York City
Ringler, Isidor F New York City
Roes, Charles M Brooklyn, N. Y.
Rossomano, Dominick A Corona, N. Y.
Savarese, Angelo G : New York City
Savarese, John S New York City
Scorza, Salvatore New York City
Sepples, Richard J Litchfield, Conn.
Shatzkin, Joseph M Brooklyn, N. Y.
Smith, William McKay • Bronxville, IT. Y.
Snyder, Frederick J Yonkers, N. Y.
Sobel, Moses Newburgh, N. Y.
Straehler, Walter G New York City
Stiller, Henry H New York City
Teeter, Albert A Plainfield, N. J.
Thomas, Stanley W Yonkers, N. Y.
Tiffany, Frederick L Bridge Hampton, N. Y.
Truman, Nathan E Bainbridge, N. Y.
Tuman, Meyer Brooklyn, N. Y.
Weinberger, Isidore New York City
[69]
Senior University Students
Allen, Thomas A Metuchen, N. J.
Baker, Virginia Middletown, N. Y.
Blanco, Augustin San Juan, Porto Rico
Breunig, Viola E Newark, N. J.
Bykowsky, Harold E Marlin, Texas
Cooper, Harvey R Walden, N. Y.
Dalton, Edward O Syracuse, N. Y.
Davis, Edwin M Elizabeth, N. J.
Driggs, Karl H Sayre, Penn.
Edelman, Samuel New York City
Eimer, Walter R New York City
Estrada, Asuncion Cardenas, Cuba
Forman, Eva S Newark, N. J.
Hecker, John H Munster, Germany
Kemble, Daisy E Brooklyn, N. Y.
Leibermann, Leo New York City
McSweeney, Jennie Long Lake, N. Y.
Panebianco, Joseph New York City
0
62 COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
Prencipe, Pasquale New York City
Perez, Pedro E San Domingo, San Domingo
Vernon, Ralph Y Florida, N. Y.
Wisendanger, Estelle V. (Mrs.) Woodmere, N. Y.
22]
GRADUATE COURSE
Ballard, Charles W New York City
Bliss, Andrew R Brooklyn, N. Y.
[2]
FOOD AND DRUG COURSE
Friedman, Morris New York City
G regg, James New York City
H offmann, Frank P New York City
Hostmann, Jeannot Hoboken, N. J.
Hulse, William H Washingtonville, N. Y.
Klein, Louis New York City
Lo Sardo, Antonio New York City
Lozier, Merritt W Newburgh, N. Y.
Oakes, John K Haverstraw, N. Y.
Morgan, Thurlow W Bluffton, Ind.
Ohriner, Jacob S New York City
Peppmuller, Ernest A New York City
Ritter, Clarence J Yonkers, N. Y.
Schick, Eugene M Bethlehem, Penn.
Twiggar, Lee W Ossining, N. Y.
Weiss, Samuel A Yonkers, N. Y.
Wolfram, Max Brooklyn, N. Y.
[17]
SUMMER SESSION
ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD
James Chidester Egbert, Ph.D.
Professor of Latin, Director of the Summer Session
Frederick J. E. Woodbridge, LL.D.
Johnsonian Professor of Philosophy
Frederick Paul Keppel, A.B.
Secretary of the University
Clyde Furst, A.M.
Secretary of Teachers College
William Addison Hervey, A.M.
Adjunct Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
Session of 1907
In the University Faculties and Schools
Professors — Bigelow, Botsford, Burr, Burton-Opitz, Cohn,
Egbert, Grabau, Hervey, Jackson, Kasner, Keyser, Loiseaux,
Lucke, Maclay, McCrea, McWhood, Mayer, Montague, Morgan,
Odell, H. C. Sherman, Trent, Tufts, Vulte, Woodbridge,
Woodworth.
Instructors — Miss Earhart, Fauver, Miss Fulmer, Miss Hill,
Jordan, Miss Kirchwey, Ling, McCastline, Noyes, Remy, Stone
Weick.
Tutors — Beans, Chambers, Fitz-Gerald, Gill, Heuser, Jouet
Maxson, Porterfield, Thatcher.
Lecturer — Sinclair.
Assistants — Miss Benton, Farwell, Miss Stackpole, Steeves,
Woodman.
Other Officers of Instruction
Herman Vandenberg Ames, Ph.D., History; Edward P. Cheyney,
A.M., History; Elwood P. Cubberley, Ph.D., Education; Joseph
Villiers Denney, A.B., English; Edward Charles Elliott, Ph.D.,
363
364 GENERAL STATEMENT
Education; Robert Herndon Fife, Jr., Ph.D, German; Ernest
Norton Henderson, Ph.D., Education; George Holston, Drawing;
Bertha M. Hopkins, A.M., Physical Education; George Kriehn,
Ph.D., Fine Arts; Fred Eugene Leonard, M.D., Physical Education;
Ernest Hiram Lindley, Ph.D., Psychology; Archibald M. Mac-
Mechan, Ph.D., English; Roswell Cheney McCrea, Ph.D., Eco-
nomics; Charles Riborg Mann, Ph.D., Physics; Maude Allene
Monroe, A.B., Physical Education; William E. Mott, S.B., Civil
Engineering; Thomas Andrew Storey, Ph.D., Physical Education;
Duane Reed Stuart, Ph.D., Latin; Chauncey R. Thomas, Manual
Training; Frank Ernest Thompson, A.B., Education; Oliver Miles
Washburn, A.B., Greek; Roland Hugh Williams, A.M., Chemistry ;
Wealthea A. Wilson, Domestic Science; Frederic A. Woll, Physical
Education; Mary Woods, Manual Training.
Assistants
Henry Blumberg, Mathematics; William H. Boynton, Domestic
Science; Frank G. Bruner, Psychology; Laura Falls, Manual Train-
ing; George Thomas Holm, Swimming; Clara Chaney James,
Education; Frances Jenkins, Education; Alice Cynthia King>
Education; H. L. Parr, Mechanical Engineering; R. R. Renshaw,
Chemistry ; Anna C. Thornton, Physical Education; Walter George
Whitman, Chemistry; Elvira Wood, Geology.
GENERAL STATEMENT
The eighth Summer Session of the University opened July 9, 1907,
and closed August 17. The registration days for the Summer Session
were July 5, 6, and 8. Examinations for certificates were held on
August 17.
Courses were offered to men and women on equal terms, in chemistry,
domestic science, drawing, economics, education, engineering (civil and
mechanical), English (including rhetoric and composition), fine arts,
geography, geology, German, Greek, history, kindergarten, Latin,
manual training, mathematics, music, nature study, philosophy,
physical education, physics, physiology, psychology, and Romance
languages.
Each course consisted of thirty lectures or other exercises, or their
equivalent in laboratory or field work. Credit for such courses in the
Summer Session as are accepted by the several Faculties of the Uni-
versity in partial fulfilment of the requirements for degrees or for
diplomas in teaching is given upon the satisfactory completion of the
course, including the final examination.
Fees
(See page 28)
The tuition fee for the Summer Session is $30, which covers courses
REGISTRATION OF 1 90 7 365
of instruction aggregating six points credit, the normal limit allowed
by the regulations.
For the Announcement of the Summer Session of 1908, which will
open July 7 and offer a wide range of courses, or for information
regarding dormitory accommodations, or board and lodging, address
the Secretary of Columbia University, New York.
Summer Courses in Medicine
The fifth series of Summer Courses in Medicine for men was offered
in 1907. Courses were given in applied therapeutics, clinical pathol-
ogy, dermatology, genito-urinary diseases, gynecology, laryngology,
medical diagnosis, neurology, obstetrics, ophthalmology, orthopedic
surgery, otology, physical diagnosis, physiology and surgery.
This work will be continued in the summer of 1908, and persons
interested are requested to apply for the Announcement of the Summer
Courses in Medicine, which will be furnished without charge upon
application after February 1 to the Secretary of the University.
Registration, Session of 1907
Copies of the separately printed Directory of the Summer Session,
1907, may be had upon application to the Secretary of the University.
In this catalogue, at the end of the Register of Students under each
Faculty, will be found a list of the Summer Session Students of 1907
who matriculated under that Faculty, but who did not return to
register in September.
SUMMARY
I. Non-matriculated 734
II. Matriculated:
1. Columbia College 63
2 . Barnard College 37
3. Applied Science 131
4. Fine Arts 2
5. Political Science 20
6. Philosophy 154
7. Pure Science 41
8. Teachers College 167
9. College of Pharmacy 1 616
1350
Summer Session in Medicine:
1. Non-matriculated 27
2. Matriculated 15 42
Total 1392
EXTENSION TEACHING
ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD
James Earl Russell, LL.D.,
Dean of Teachers College, Chairman
Adolphe Cohn, LL.B., A.M.,
Professor of the Romance Languages and Literatures
i Franklin Thomas Baker, A.M.,
Professor of the English Language and Literature
Herbert Gardiner Lord, A.M.,
Professor of Philosophy
Frederick Henry Sykes, Ph.D.,
Professor of English, Director of Extension Teaching
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
In the University Faculties and Schools
Professors — Hamlin, Jackson, Cohn, Clark, Speranza, Wood-
hull, Baker, Parker, Dodge, Bikle, McMurry, Monroe, Dutton,
Crampton, Thorndike, Brewster, Knapp, Woodbridge, Bagster-
Collins, Sykes, Loiseaux, Hervey, Tombo, Stoughton, McWhood,
Spingarn, Dow, Tufts, Shotwell, Page, Johnson, Snedden, Krapp,
Remy, Montague, Beard, Jordan, Suzzallo.
Instructors — Harriman, Noyes, Ling, Warren, Curtis, Mitchell,
Braun, Fitzgerald, Barrows.
Tutors — Muller, Heuser, Maxson, Gill, Brown, Morrison,
Bates, Kunze.
Lecturers— Hodge, Wissler, Parker (W.B.), Tassin, Richard.
Upton, Hayes (C.H.), Cole (P.R.).
Assistants — Zerbe, Bigongiari, Boynton, Cartwright, Mac-
gregor, Foote, Lawson, Daschbach, Thurston, Williams, Greiff.
366
GENERAL STATEMENT 367
Other Officers of Instruction
James Hulme Canfield, A.M., LL.D., History; Clyde Furst, A.M.,
English Literature; Thomas Whitney Surette, Music; Mari Ruef
Hofer, Music; Daniel Gregory Mason, A.B., Music; Clayton
M. Hamilton, A.M., English; Charles Johnston, History; Marion B.
B. Langzettel, Kindergarten Education; Ad a M. Locke, Kindergarten
Education; Arthur Alexander Stoughton, Ph.D., Architecture;
Calvin Brainard Cady, Music; Ralph Curtis Ringwalt, A.B.,
LL.B., English and Political Science; Walter Boughton Pitkin,
A.B., B.D., Philosophy; Charles Galwey, A.B., English; Albin
Hermann Beyer, C.E., Surveying and Structures; Allen M. Knowles,
B.C.E., Applied Mechanics; Harry Bradford Pond, S.B., Applied
Mechanics; Elizabeth G. Baldwin, Library Economy; George
Herbert Betts, A.M., Ph.M., Education; Michael Marks Davis, Jr.,
Ph.D., Political Science; Stephen Pierce Duggan, Ph.D., Political
Science; Louis Eugen Jallade, Architecture ; Harry G. Paul, A.M.,
English; Cliff Winfield Stone, B.S., Elementary Education; Clar-
ence Hudson White, Fine Arts; Walter George Whitman, A.B.,
Chemistry; Theodore C. Mitchill, A.M., English.
GENERAL STATEMENT
1. Extension Teaching is defined by the Statutes of the University
as instruction given by University officers and under the administrative
supervision and control of the University, either away from the Uni-
versity buildings or at the University, for the benefit of students
not able to attend the regular courses of instruction.
Extension Teaching is under the immediate supervision of an Ad-
ministrative Board and the Director of Extension Teaching. The
relation of Extension Teaching to the other work of the University is
subject to the jurisdiction of the University Council.
Extension Teaching facilitates and directs instruction for students
not in academic residence by means of various courses of instruction
given at special times and places, both at the University and elsewhere.
The University thus offers to men and women, especially to those
engaged in teaching, who can give only a portion of their time to
study, an opportunity to pursue some subjects included in a liberal
education and to make progress, if they so desire, towards a diploma
in teaching or an academic degree.
2. Subject to the general authority of the University Council, the
weight to be attached to attendance upon an Extension course on the
part of a student who subsequently makes application to be admitted
to candidacy for a degree or diploma is fixed by the appropriate
Faculty or Administrative Committee.
368 EXTENSION TEACHING
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION
The courses offered by Extension Teaching are as follows :
I — Collegiate Courses. These are courses that repeat at special
hours or places the courses in liberal studies offered in the colleges of
the University — particularly Columbia College and Barnard College.
These are given, one or more hours weekly, during the college year,
for thirty weeks of actual instruction. They are given in the same
manner, and often by the same instructors, as the corresponding
courses in the Colleges. University credit, when granted, attaches to
those courses as to courses of instruction in the Colleges.
II — Professional and Technical Courses for Teachers. These are
courses offered in cooperation with Teachers College, both at the
University and in local centres to teachers in active service, who can
avail themselves of these courses to get instruction in the psychology,
history, and principles of education, special methods of teaching,
particularly in elementary work, and technical instruction in the
fine and manual arts.
Ill — Evening Technical Courses. These are courses given with
the cooperation of the School of Applied Science and the School of
Architecture of the University, and certain technical departments of
Teachers College. They are intended to meet the requirements of
technical and professional workers who desire to get instruction at
night from University instructors in technical courses modified to their
particular needs.
IV — Lecture Courses. These are short courses of lectures which
are not accepted towards the fulfilment of requirements for degrees or
diplomas. They are intended for general audiences, and are given
only in local centres.
Students attending courses at the University pay usually at the
rate of $10 for each course of one hour a week for thirty weeks.
In local centres they pay the fee determined by the local centre.
Courses given in local centres usually cost the centre from $260 to
$500 for a credit course, and $90 to $150 for a lecture course, the
difference depending on the difficulty of the course and the rank of
the lecturer.
For detailed information as to the places and hours for these courses
both at the University and at the several local centres, the qualifica-
tions for admission, the regulations for registration, candidacy for
degrees and diplomas, attendance and examinations, the fees pre-
scribed, and for a statement of each course offered, see the Announce-
ment of Extension Teaching, 1907-08, which may be obtained without
charge upon application to the Secretary of the University.
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION
369
NUMBER OF COURSES
Collegiate and Professional Courses
For 1907-08 credit courses are offered to non-matriculated students
and to matriculants who obtain permission of their dean, as follows:
SUBJECT NUMBER OP COURSES SUBJECT
Anthropology 1
Architecture 1
Biblical Literature 2
Botany 2
Chemistry 1
Comparative Literature 1
Education 3
English 15
Fine Arts 3
German 7
History 5
Kindergarten Education
Manual Training
Mathematics
Music
Philosophy
Political Science
Psychology
Romance Languages
(French 4, Italian 1,
Spanish 1 )
4
1
3
1 1
4
Technical Courses
The following courses are likewise offered at the University:
Applied Mechanics .
Architecture
Domestic Science. .
Electricity
Fine Arts
Industrial Chemistry...
Mathematics
Surveying and Struc-
tures
Lecture Courses
For 1907-08 the following lecture courses, each having usually six
lectures, are offered for delivery in local centres:
NUMBER OP COURSES SUBJECT NUMBER OP COURSES
SUBJECT
Anthropology 1
Architecture 8
Astronomy 4
Biblical Literature 4
Comparative Literature 2
Domestic Science 3
Education 2
English 29
Fine Arts . . .
Geography . . .
German ,
History
Indo-Iranian ,
SUBJECT
Latin
Manual Arts
Metallurgy
Music
Philosophy
Physics
Political Science
Psychology
Romance Languages
(French 6, Italian 3,
Spanish 2)
Zoology
1
2
1
*3
4
3
6
3
11
2
DEGREES CONFERRED DURING 1906-07
Columbia College
Bachelor of Arts
William Henry Allen, Jr.
Horace Thurber Aplington
Adolph Bangser
Philip Baum
Harold Kennedy Bell
Samuel Cranston Benson
Louis Berkowitz (February 2)
Henry Carl Betjemann
Henry Bierman
Louis Edward Bisch
Henry Blumberg
Walter Joseph Brennan (February 2)
Charles Raymond Brodix, Jr.
John Weedman Brodix
Frank Cornish Brown (August 16)
Bernard Campbell
William Morgan Carpenter
Henry Eagle Chapin
Harry Joshua Chelimer (August 16)
Frank Chodorov
Thomas Fayette Clark
Edward Trowbridge Collins
George Frederick Comstock
Frederick Linn Cooper (November 6)
Charles Floyd Cornell
Frank Alexander Dickey
Walter Simon Doernberg
Henry Western Eastman
Elias Alexander Edelstein (February2
Harry Drew Egbert
Maurice George Ellenbogen
William Morris Feigenbaum
Emil Emanuel Fischer
Philip A. Fischer
Herbert Forsch (February 2)
Robert Henry Fowler (September 17)
Louis David Frohlich
Percy Adolphus Gordon
John McVicar Haight
Frank Clark Hall
Lester Harrisson
Robert Henry Haskell
Lewis French Stearns Hawes
Edwin Henes, Jr.
Ferris Sands Hetherington
Israel Himelhoch
Paul Charles Henry Holter
Frank Louison Hopkins
Allen Tilton Hopping
William Jabine
Charles Frederick Havemeyer
Jackson (February 2)
Walter Edward Kelley
Edwin Kirk
Frederick William Kobbe
Frederick Adolph Herman Leuchs
Arthur Saul Levy, Jr.
Hiram Sidney Lewine
Benjamin Abraham Lichter
Theodore August Liebler, Jr.
Theodore McCarthy
Charles Miles McKinlay
George Miner Mackenzie
Ralph Martland
Robert Coolidge Masterton
Charles Mayer
Donald Herbert Truesdell Miller
Jacob Samuel Minkin
Cornelius von Erden Mitchell
Victor William Mori
Alfred Stuart Myers
George Norris
Irving Simon Ottenberg
) Harry Victor Emanuel Palmblad
William Grant Palmer
James Lewis Parks, Jr.
Delwyn Walter Peiser
Seth Low Pierrepont
Frederic Cozzens Fitz Randolph
Angus Matthews Raphael
Charles Henry Reges
Charles M. Rolker, Jr.
Edwin Joseph Rosenbaum
Bernard Abraham Rosenblatt
Grover Grauman Sales
Abraham Bertram Samuels
John Egmont Schermerhorn, Jr.
Max Schonberg
William Schreiber
Walter Max Schwarz
370
DEGREES CONFERRED
37>
Samson Selig
Alvin Theodore Shapinsky
Reuben Shapiro
Charles O'Conor Sloane (September 18
Thomas Elliott Snyder
Michael Solomon
Charles Burr Spencer
Albert Steinpeld
Max Tachna
John Henry Taylor
Harold Edwin Vehslagb
Charles Joseph Walsh
[113]
Carolus Roe Webb
Lawrence Albert Wechsler
Frank Corday Welles
) Carl Wicke
Byrd Douglas Wise
Louis Elsberg Wise
Edwin Hess Woarms
Leonard James Wolf
Louis Jacob Wolff
Isaac Maurice Wormser (August id)
John Carl York
Frederick William Zons
Bachelor of Science
M. Raymond Harrington (February 2) Roy Samuel McElwee
Walter Hartman
Herbert Sidney Kohlberg
John Francis McCall
[8]
Chester Columbus Marshall
Joseph Edward Ridder
Edgar George Thomssen
Barnard College
Bachelor of Arts
Irene Bennett Adams
Amalie Louise Althaus
Anna Genevieve Anthony
Eva Auerbach
Margaret Hart Bailey
Hannah Mansfield Battell
Cora Elizabeth Bennett
Judith Bernays
Beatrice Bernkopp
Mabel Louise Boote
Josephine Brand
Edna Florence Brown
Gertrude Louise Cannon
Anne Carroll
Helen Carter
Sabra Carrington Colby
Emma Cornelia Cole
Evangeline Cole
Helen Graziella Deacon
Jean Disbrow
Agnes Elizabeth Ernst
Julia Huelat Freed
Florence Belle Furth
Cara Leslie Gardiner
Helen Lehman Goodhart
Florence Gordon
Lucile Grant
Lollie Belle Hardwick
Helen Josephine Harvitt
Edith Heimann
Lilian Hellin
Hazel Van Derzee Henderson
Kathleen Elizabeth Hurty
Marguerite Baer Israel
Eva Jacobs
Irma Etelka Jellenik
Alma Elsie Joachimson
Lucetta Pitney Johnson
Sarah Keeney
Blanche Margaret Klein
Irene Constance Kohn
Sara Emma Lay
Mary Victoria Lipe
Mary Elizabeth Lord
Amalie Lowenthal
Elsa DuBois McKee
Fannie Moulton McLane
Pierina McLaughlin
Emily Lamont MacEwan
Annie Laurie Manley
Louise Christine Odencrantz
Charlotte Rose Oesterlein
Juliet Stuart Points
Josephine Southworth Pratt
Katherine Louise Rapp
Ida Charlotte Ray
Mary Catherine Ruth Reardon
Ethel May Rosemon
Elizabeth Rusk
Elsie Schachtel
Natalie Ida Shinn (September 17)
Helen Shoninger
Clara Elizabeth Smith
Katharine Augusta Smith
372
DEGREES CONFERRED
Mary Edla Tibbits
Helen Abbie Tracy
Dorothy True
Grace Clapperton Turnbull
Muriel Valentine
Mary Barbour Walker
[76]
Lilian May Wardell
Edna Major Wilkes
Florence Morgenthau Wise
Sophie Parsons Woodman
Daisy Irene Yale
Anne Whittemore Young
Bachelor of Laws
David Armstrong, A.B.
Wesley Heman Beach, A.B.
Edward Dudley Bryde, A.B.
Karl Wilhelm Buck, Equiv. A.B.
Henry Daggett Bulkley, A.B.
Frank Callahan, A.B.
Asa Leroy Carter, LL.B.
Robert Newton Chambers, A.B.
John Davidson Clark, A.B.
Stephen Carlton Clark, A.B.
Moncure Cockrell, B.S.
William Asbury Collings, Ph.B.
Harrison Josiah Conant, A.B., A.M.
Chester Welde Cuthell, A.B.
Sydney Sylvester Decker, Jr., B.S.
Clarence Walworth Donovan, A.B
Cam Dawson Dorsey, B.S.
Robert Duncan Eggleston, A.B.
David Feifer, A.B.
Henry Baldwin Fischer, Ph.B.
William Fisher, Jr., A.B.
Herman James Fliederblum, A.B.
George Frankenthaler, B.S.
William Urwick Goodbody, A.B.
Harold Harper, A.B.
Cornelius Lansing Hays, A.B.
Louis Percy Hewitt, A.B.
Grant Hoerner, A.B., A.M.
George Sanford Hornblower, A.B.
William Mills Ivins, Jr., A.B.
Frederick Weidemeyer Jackson, A.B.
Murray Goodlet Jenkins, A.B., A.M.
Benjamin Mark Kaye, A.B.
John Slack Keith, A.B.
Gordon Saul Philip Kleeberg, A.B.,
A.M.
Frederic Edward Klein, A.B.
[73]
Otto Rudolph Koechl, A.B.
Jerome Arnold Kohn, A.B., A.M.
Wilbur Whitfield La Fetra, A.B.
Herman Moore Langworthy, A.B., A.M
Benjamin Morris Levy, A.B.
Edward Benjamin Levy, A.B., A.M.
Robert Carpenter Lewis, A.B.
Samuel Adolph Lewisohn, A.B.
Monte London, A.B.
Dudley Odell McGovney, A.B., A.M.
Theodore McCurdy Marsh, A.B.
George Zerdin Medalie, A.B.
Ezra Birdette Merrill
Joseph Michael, B.S., A.M.
Max Michael, A.B., A.M.
Elmer Craver Miller, A.B.
Mark Hunter Miller, A.B.
Philips Alexander Moore,
Sidney Newborg, A.B.
Frank P. Nohowel
John Abbott Powell, A.B.,
Herbert Robinson Rising, Ph.B.
Abraham Rockmome, A.B.
Gerald Benjamin Rosenheim, A.B., A.M.
Harry James Rosenson, A.B.
Norman Pulver Steven Schloss, A.B.
Harry Schwed, A.B.
David Irving Shapiro, B.S.
Charles Bascom Shelton, A.B.
Clyde Everett Shorey, A.B.
Joseph Solomon, A.B.
Weld Merrick Stevens, A.B.
John Cuthbert Sweeney
Frank Chapman Van Cleef, A.B.
Norman Wyckoff Van Nostrand, A.B.
Kaufman Richard Wallach, A.B., A.M.
Morris Weinstein, A.B.
Julius Louis Wolff, A.B.
A.B.
A.M.
A.M.
Doctor of Medicine
Theodore Henry Allen, A.B.
Charles Albert Anderson
Murray Harold Bass, A.B.
Frederick Sumner Briggs, A.B.
Sanger Brown
Theodore Mithoff Cartmell, A.B.
Franklin Morris Class, A.B.
Royal Morris Cohn
Burrill Bernard Crohn, A.B.
James Bailey Cross
Homer Leland Day, A.B. (October, 1906)
Harry Ryerson Decker, A.B.
DEGREES CONFERRED
373
Isaac Carleton Dederer, A.B.
Richard Derby, A.B.
John Joseph Dorsey
Carl Frederick August Eggers
Eugene William Erler, A.B.
Gustavus William Faber, A.B.
Nathan Chandler Foot, A.B.
Samuel Forstot, A.B.
Jay Irving Fort, A.B.
Frederic Hultman Foucar, A.B.
Lynn Lyle Fulkerson, A.B.
Merton Layton Funk, A.B.
Gil Juvenal Gil, A.B.
William Aloysius Gillen, Jr., A.B. (Oc
tober, 1906)
Denis Webb Granberry, A.B.
Simon Charles Grudberg, A.B.
Hubert Vivian Guile, B.S.
Paul Tompkins Harper, Ph.B.
Ferdinand Frederick Hedemann
Jacob Heiman, A.B.
Howard Crosby Hofp
Joseph Pierre Hoguet, A.B.
Rnd Gordon Holt
David Elihu Hyman
Herman Meyer Jaffe
Henry James, A.B.
William Richard Janeway, 2d, A.B.
Thomas Sebastian Keating
Cadwell Benson Keeney, A.B.
Morris David Keller, A.B.
Richard Edward Knapp
Henry Frederick Kramer
Edward Sheafe Krans, A.B.
Albert Richard Lamb, A.B.
William Lamberson
Arthur Gabriel Larkin, A.B.
George Lichtenstein, A.B.
Daniel Ralph Lucas, Ph.G., B.S., A.M.
Richard H. McBaine, A.B.
Robert Lyness McCready, Jr.
Richard Moncure Macrae (October,
1906)
Herbert David Mandelbaum, A.B.
George Edmund Miller, A.B., A.M.
Louis Miller, A.B.
William Merrill Mills, A.B.
Raymond Boileau Mixsell, A.B.
Carl Richard Moeckel
David Hubbell More, Ph.B.
Maurice Jones Munker, A.B.
Charles Joseph Murn, A.B.
Charles Worth Norton
Howard LeRoy Norton
Edgar Davison Oppenheimer, A.B.
Maynard Smith Owen, A.B.
George William Partridge, A.B.
Gouverneur Morris Phelps, B.S.
Walter Phillips. A.B., A.M.
John Brewer Powers, A.B., A.M.
Maurice Edgar Rose, A.B.
Abraham Nathaniel Schiller, A.B.
Louis Herbert Schwartz, A.B.
. William Alfred Scruton (October, 1906
William Harrison Slaughter, Ph.D.
Arthur Elsworth Soper
Harry Tucker Spelman
Alfred Stillman, 2d. A.B.
Ralph Griffiths Stillman, A.B.
Raymond Peter Augustine Sullivan
A.B., A.M.
Walter Stanborough Sutton, A.B.
A.M.
Arthur Warton Swann, A.B.
Charles Goodman Taylor '
William Kenney Terriberry, A.B.
James Patten Trotter, A.B.
Francis Tweddell
Frederick Brown Utley, A.B.
John Colin Vaughan
James Percy Wall, A.B
Charles Abraham Wallenstein
Frederick S. Weingarten, B.S.
Abraham Owen Wilensky, A.B.
Edward Bigelow Woods, B.S.
[93]
Engineer of Mines
Hugh Archbald, A.B.
George Oliver Arnold
Harold Mairs Beattie
Arthur Peter Braun
Paul Kortright Brill
Richard Stuart Burdette
Oliver Perry Chisholm, Jr.
Frederick Huntington Clark
Arthur Isador Dehuff
Thomas Francis Donnelly
Morris Jesup Elsing
Francis Gordon Fabian, Mech.E.
George Edwin Farish
Gustav Ludwig Fleissner
Albert Frank (October 30)
Walter Gardner
Robert McLeod Johnson (October 11)
Irving Samuel Josephs, A.B.
Frederick Kruse, Jr.
Julius Arthur Lewisohn, A.B.
James Macfarlane Little
Robert Marsh, Jr.
Walter Stanley Palmer, B.S.
John Thomas Roberts, Jr.
374
DEGREES CONFERRED
Mortimer Freeman Sayre
James Brand Tenney (November 9)
Benjamin Franklin Tillson
[31]
Thomas Hildrup Tulloch
Sidney Helmuth Wilcox (September 19)
Paul Day Willard
Alfales Burgess Young (October 5)
Civil Engineer
Huntington Clark Atwater Oliver Cromwell Lisman
Dudley' Paul Babcock Henry Hudson Edwin Lynn
Webster Lance Benham (July 31, 1905) Hans Frank Meyer, B.S.
Harry Montifiore Bergman
Otto Brown
Julian Girard Clarkson (October ii
Charles Francis Dickson
Jacob M. Friedland, B.S.
Charles Rockwell Gardiner
Daniel Gorren
[20]
Frank Axtelle Renner
Walter Louis Rothschild, A.B.
Charles Albert Schwaneflugel
Benjamin Joseph Sigmund (October 4)
Joseph Whittla Stinson, B.S.
Edward Ahlert Stuhrman
Richard Maxwell Ta\-lor
Arthur Aigeltinger
James Julius Arnsfield
Henry Christopher Barteld
Stanley Frank Bond, A.B.
Reginald Wadsworth Cauchois
Archibald Doty
William Henry Friedman-
Louis Goldbaum (October 5)
Victor Raphael Greiff
[17]
Electrical Engineer
Gustav Herman Heidgerd, A.B.
Herman Ernst Kreuder A B. (December
12)
Hertz Levin
Robert Bach Litchfield (September 27)
Emanuel Saqui
Alfred Ephraim Seelig
Maurice Leonard Sindeband
Arthur I. Sundheimer
Mechanical Engineer
William Douglas Monks
William Newell, A.B.
Raymond Storms Osborn
William Thomas Peacock
Herman Raymond Smith
Edward Day Thurston, Jr., A.B.
J. Laurence Waldron, A.B.
Leonard Albert Arnstein
Raymond DeWitt Bailey
Mario Gerolamo Carbone
William Chapin Huntington
Russell Compton Jones
John I. Merritt
Kenneth Ballard Millett
[14]
Bachelor of Science in Chemistry
Siegfried Fischer Alfred Hemmer Kropff
Leon Berthold Forst (September 29) Ludwig Schaefer
Albin Henry Warth
Is]
Bachelor of Science in Architecture
Roger H. Bullard
Charles Theodore Emile Dieterlen
Leo Maurice Feldman
John Henry Klenke, Jr.
[7]
Emma Louise Adams
Henriette Adams
Florence Myra Andrews
Harriet Elizabeth Ashby
Eugenia Blake Babcock
Mary Bullock Belcher
Edmund Thorp See
Alexander Duncan Seymour, Jr. (No-
vember 12)
Gustave George Vigouroux
Special Diplomas
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Domestic Science)
(Fine Arts)
(Kindergarten)
(Fine Arts)
(Kindergarten)
DEGREES CONFERRED
375
Carrie Louisa Boicb
Carol Brown
Agnes Maude Bussing
Zabellb Costikyan
Olivia Cunningham
Dorothy David
Abbib De Lury
Edith Deborah Dixon
Isabel Genevieve Donnelly
Sadie Dorsette
Caroline Josephine Durk.es
Jennie Rebecca Faddis
Marie Ellen Flynn
Louise Jewett Forbes
Sarah Ellis Glenn
Helen Graham
Maud Ellen Hayes
Gertrude Mary Heaphy
Anna Hedges
Georgetta Maria Hollis (October 25)
Susie Markham Jones
Mary Miles Jordan
Caroline Lamson
John Nathan Lobdell
Catharine Taylor McCaig
Elizabeth Eunice Merriam
Genevra May Miner
Jane Herbert Nicholson
Gertrude Cecilia Nolan
Ruth Waterman Norton
Julia Mae Opperman
Aurilla Jean Perry
Mary Cornelia Rainey
Allie Grace Reeves
Helen Mary Reynolds
Janet Isabel Rose
Ethel Hathaway Rust
Bessie Robertson Sargeant
Josephine Schiffer
Gertrude Vera Schweiger
Edna Lucy Skinner
Helen Smith
Louise Smith
Muriel Isobel Speller
Anna Marie Steiner
Maude Rachel Sutherland
Susa Amelia Talmage
Shizuka Utsumi
Leonard William Wahlstrom
Mary Viola Walter
Cora Blanche Williams
Sarah Moore Wilson
Lydia Kathbrine Witmbyer
[60]
(Domestic Art)
(Kindergarten)
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Kindergarten)
{Manual Training)
(Primary Supervision)
(Do>nestic Science)
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Kindergarten)
(Elementary)
(Hospital Economics)
(Primary Supervision)
(Kindergarten)
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Kindergarten)
(Domestic Science)
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Primary Supervision)
(Hospital Economics)
(Music)
(Grammar Grades)
(Elementary Supervision)
(Manual Training)
(Manual Training)
(Domestic Science)
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Kindergarten)
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Kindergarten)
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Kindergarten)
(Hospital Economics)
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Manual Training)
(Elementary Supervision)
(Music)
(Domestic Science)
(Fine Arts)
(Donestic Science)
(Fine Arts)
(Dotnestic Science)
(Fine Arts)
(Kindergarten Supervision)
(Domestic Art)
(Kindergarten)
(Fine Arts)
(Primary Supervision)
(Manual Training)
(Manual Training)
(Elementary Supervision)
(Elementary)
(Domestic Science)
(Fine Arts)
376
DEGREES CONFERRED
Bachelor of Science in Education
Thomas Agnew, Jr.
Josephine Mary Bagnasco
Bessie Malena Bates
Vinora Beal
Luna Evangeline Bigelow
Jessie Blanche Bitner
Ralph Elliott Blakeslee
Arva Erastus Blend
Josephine Marie de Boer
Geneva Lima Bower
Thomas William Burckhalter
Emma Seymour Butler
Laura Annis Cauble
Mary Florence Clark
Margaret Coffin
Charlotte Harrison Cornish
Nellie Josephine Crocker
Hannah Mary Cushman
Flora Louise Cutting
Carl Danielson
Maud Davies
Helen Marion Day
Nellie Maude De Cou
Forrest Allison De Graff (April 25)
Lillian Roberts Duffey (January 31)
Anna Cecilia Engelbrekt
Jane Therese Fales
Mary Elizabeth Falls
Mary Bertha Fletcher
Clara Elsa Franke
Julia Anna Gallup
Rosamond Goertner
Mildred Rutherford Gould
Priscilla Griffith
Florence Kressler Griswold
Fred Blaine Bagaman
Howard Stoddard Harris
Melvin Hix (January 31)
Hattie Mason Hodge
Emma Barksdale Hopkins
William Cyprian Hopkins (October 25)
Mary Snow Horton (January 31)
Margarette Elizabeth Howard
Alma Floy Hungerford
Sarah S. Jambs
Isabella Emma Jewell
William Hazlett Johnston
Fannie Kagan
Annie Keightly Keightly
Florence Kellogg (October 23)
Faith Robinson Lanman
Helena Rebecca Lawson
[100]
Charlotte Emmeline Lee
Annabel Bradley Long
Augustus Ludwig
Olive Simpson McCully
Jessie McFarlane
Anna Elizabeth McMahon
Marguerite Budlong Mann (October 25)
Alice Martin
Elizabeth Frances Mascord
Jessie Bee Merrick
Louise Gertrude Wagmann Metzger
Maud Elene Michell
Edward Norris Milliken
Elizabeth Montell (April 2s)
Isabel Murray
Jennie Erskine Murray
Anna Gausmann Noyes (October 25)
Margaret Manigault Pinckney
Ida Whitcomb Prentice
Mary Amelia Proudfoot
Joseph Ambrose Reed
Katharine Aloysia Reilly (April 25)
Winifred Bertha Reininger
Virginia Reynolds
Elizabeth Adelia Rice (October 2s)
Kate L. Robertson
Charlotte Amy Rogers
Edith Hoyt Rollinson
Jacob Rubin
Myrta Russell
Amy Schussler
Frances Adeline Seward
Florence Electa Silliman (October 25)
Mary Pilkington Simmons
Nellie Grosvenor Small
Benton Louis Snyder
Romiett Stevens
William Mortimer Thayer
Amelia Tompkins
Edith May Tufts
Florence Ellett Valentine
Leo William Wax
Guy Fred Wells
Eunice Wallace Welsh
Jessie Lucetta Welsh
Grace Margaret Whittemore
Felix Eugene Wilcox
Margaret Rachel Wilson
Margaret Chester Wood (January 31)
Theodore Ethel Wye
Elizabeth Dun Young
Madeline Young
DEGREES CONFERRED
377
Doctor's Diploma in Education
Pbrcival Richard Cole
A.B., Sydney, 1903; A.M. 190s;
F.C.P., London, 1906.
Jesse Harliaman Coursault
A.B., Ohio Univ., 1893; A.M. 1898;
A.M., Harvard, 1900.
Is]
Arthur Julius Jones
A.B. Iowa Coll., 1893.
William Carl Ruediger
Ph.B., Wisconsin, 1899; Ph.M. 1903.
David Samuel Snedden
A.M., 1901; A.B., Leland Stanford,
1897.
Master's Diploma in Education
Thomas Marietta Abernathy
A.B., Univ. Nashville, 1904.
Eva Adalene Acken
B.S., 1906.
John James Armstrong
Ph.B., Mount Union, 1906.
Mary Louise Bancroft
H.B., Smith, 1902.
Harry Erwin Bard
A.B., Wabash, 1894; B.D. Union
Theol. Sem. 1901.
John Henry Bauer
A.B., Ohio Northern Univ., 1896. ,;
Edith Adelaide Beck
A.B., The Woman's Coll. of Balti-
more, 1904.
Winifred Mary Bristol
B.S., Cornell, 1897.
Thomas Quincy Browne, Jr.
A.B., Harvard, 1888.
Mabel Gray Burdick
A.B., Wellesley, 1906.
Orrok Colloque
A.B. .Trinity, 1S99.
Mattie Holliday Craighill
A.B., Randolph-Macon Woman's
Coll., 1903.
John Herbert Crippen
A.B., Leland Stanford, 1901.
PlNAKIPRASAD MAHADEOPRASAD DESAI
A.B., Baroda Coll., India, 1901.
Margaret Eves
B.L., Swathmore, 1900.
Helen Christine Fellows
A.B., Wilson Coll., 1906.
Edward Augustus Fitzpatrick
B.S., 1906.
Emmett E. Giltner
A.B., Indiana State Univ., 1904.
Geadys Gladding
Eunice Rathbone Goddard
A.B., Mt. Holyoke, 1903.
Asahel Henry Grant
A.B., Yale, 1896.
Henry Blair Braybill
A.B., Washington and Lee, 1902.
Joseph Marr Gwinn
A.B., Missouri, 1902.
Anna Charlotte Hedges
B.S., 1904; A.M., 1906. (January
31)
Benjamin Alexander Heydrick
A.B., Allegheny, 1893; A.B., Har-
vard, 1895.
Helen Hill
A.B., Vassar, 1905.
Bennett Barron Jackson
A.B., Beloit, 1890.
George Leroy Jackson
A.B., Michigan, 1906.
Alice Cynthia King
B.S., 1906.
Cornelius Wygant Lockwood
B.S., Harvard, 1899.
Franklin Clark McGill
A.B., Washington and Jefferson,
1S97; A.M., 1900.
Joseph Alden McKnight
A.B., Denver, 1905.
Charles Clarence Meyer
B.L., California, 1906.
Alice May Ober
A.B., Smith, 1905.
Alice Browning Paige
A.B., Boston, 1893.
Edith May Penney
A.B., Minnesota, 1898.
Miles Frank Reed
B.S., Idaho, 1901.
Alfred Ernst Rejall
A.B., 1906.
Florence Saeger Richards
B.S., 1905.
Frederick William Roberts
A.B., Vermont, 1896.
Lester Burton Rogers
B.S., Moores Hill Coll., 1899.
Ellis R. Shipp ;j
A.B., Utah, 1901.
378
DEGREES CONFERRED
Catherine Mae Simonton
A.B., Wesleyan, 1900.
Caroline Emorette Stackpole
B.S., 1906.
Louise Stanley
B.S., Peabody, 1903; B.E., Chicago,
1906.
James Leroy Stockton
A.B., 1906.
1 50]
Lorin Stuckey
A.B., Miami, 1906.
Clifford Brewster Upton
A.B., Michigan, 1902.
Ralph Libby Wiggin
A.B., Bowdoin, 1898.
Edith Wilkinson
A.B., Wellesley, 1888.
Sarah Holbrook Williams
A.B., Smith, 1894.
Bachelor's Diploma in Education
Thomas Agnew, Jr. (Elementary Super-
vision)
Josephine Mary Bagnasco (Mathe-
matics, Grammar Grades)
Mabel Irene Barney (Elementary)
(April 25)
Nellie Eunice Barton, B.L. (Primary
Supervision)
Bessie Malena Bates (Latin)
Vinora Beal, B.Pd. (English)
Jessie Blanche Bitner (German)
Ralph Elliott Blakeslee (English)
Arva Erastus Blend (Physical Science)
Geneva Lima Bower (Kindergarten
Supervision)
Virginia Tucker Boyd, A.B. (Kinder-
garten)
Thomas William Burckhalter (Physi-
cal Education)
Emma Seymour Butler (English)
Laura Annis Cauble (Physical Educa-
tion)
Sarah Voorheis Chollar, Ph.B., A.B.
(English)
Mary Florence Clark (History)
Margaret Coffin, A.B. (Domestic
Science)
Nellie Josephine Crocker (German,
Latin)
Hannah Mary Cushman (Physical
Science)
Flora Louisa Cutting (Mathematics)
Carl Danielson (Music)
Maud Davies (English)
Josephine Marie de Boer (English,
French)
Nellie Maude DeCou (English)
Forrest Allison De Graff (Mathe-
matics) (April 25)
Anna Cecilia Engelbrekt (Mathe-
matics)
Mary Bertha Fletcher, Ph.B., (Do-
mestic Science)
Clara Elsa Franke (German)
Julia Anna Gallup (Music)
Frank Arthur Gardner, B.S., A.M.
(Manual Training) (January 31)
Rosamond Goertner (English)
Mildred Rutherford Gould (English)
Priscilla Griffith (English)
Florence Kressler Griswold (Elemen-
tary)
Fred Blaine Hagaman (Manual Train-
ing)
Hattie Mason Hodge (Kindergarten)
Emma Barksdale Hopkins (History,
Mathematics)
Claire Greene Howe, A.B. (Kinder-
garten)
Alma Floy Hungerford (Elementary
Supervision)
Kathleen Elizabeth Hurty (Biol-
ogy)
Sarah S. James (Mathematics)
William Hazlett Johnston (Mathe-
matics)
Fannie Kagan (Nature Study)
Annie Keightly Keightly, B.Pd.,M.Pd.
(English)
Faith Robinson Lanman, B.S. (Do-
mestic Science)
Helena Rebecca Lawson, A.B. (Mathe-
matics)
Charlotte Emmeline Lee (Biology)
Annabel Bradley Long (History)
Augustus Ludwig (English)
May Shields McCully (Physical Edu-
cation) (October 25)
Olive Simpson McCully (French)
Jessie McFarlane (Geography)
Anna Elizabeth McMahon (History)
Marguerite Budlong Mann (History)
(October 25)
Elizabeth Frances Mascord (Kinder-
garten Supervision)
Jessie Bee Merrick (Physical Edu-
cation)
Louise Gertrude Wagmann Metzger
(German)
Maud Elene Michell (English)j
DEGREES CONFERRED
379
Edward Norris Milliken (Manual
Training)
Elizabeth Montell (History) (April
as)
Isabel Murray (Domestic Science)
Jennie Erskine Murray (English)
Edward Joseph O'Connell, A.B. (Eng-
lish, History) (January 31)
Clara Grow Pett (Domestic Science)
(April 25)
Mary Amelia Proudfoot (Elementary
Supervision)
Joseph Ambrose Reed (Elementary
Supervision)
Katharine Aloysia Reilly (English)
(April 25)
Winifred Bertha Reininger (Do-
mestic Art)
Virginia Reynolds (History)
Elizabeth Adelia Rice (Domestic
Art) (October 25)
Kate L. Robertson, B.S. (Domestic
Science)
Charlotte Amy Rogers (History)
Edith Hovt Rollinson (Elementary)
Max Rosenblatt, A.M. (German) (Oc-
tober 25)
Jacob Rubin, A.B. (Physical Science)
Elizabeth Rusk (Latin)
Myrta Russell (Primary Supervision)
Frances Adeline Seward (Music)
Natalie Ida Shinn, A.B. (English)
(January 3 1 )
Florence Electa Silliman (English)
(October 25)
[101]
Mary Pilkington Simmons (Domestic
Science)
Benjamin Franklin Sisk, B.S., M.S.
(English) (January 31)
Nellie Grosvenor Small (Elementary
Supervision)
Benton Louis Snyder (Physical Science)
Romiett Stevens (School Administra-
tion)
James Leroy Stockton, A.B. (Elemen-
tary) (January 31)
William Mortimer Thayer (Mathe-
matics)
Amelia Tompkins, A.B. (Mathematics)
Nanna May Tompkins, A.B. (History)
Edith May Tufts (Elementary Super-
vision)
Florence Ellett Valentine (Kinder-
garten Supervision)
Leo William Wax (German)
Elsa Ida Weil, A.B. (English)
Guy Fred Wells (Grammar Grades)
Eunice Wallace Welsh (Domestic
Science)
Jessie Lucetta Welsh, A.B. (German)
Grace Margaret Whittemore (Do-
mestic Science)
Felix Eugene Wilcox (Mathematics')
Margaret Rachel Wilson (Primary
Supervision)
Margaret Chester Wood, A.B. (Eng-
lish) (January 31)
Sarah Jones Woodward, A.B. (Greek)
Theodora Ethel Wye (Latin)
Madeline Young (Mathematics)
Pharmaceutical Chemist
Roscoe Miller Annis
Charles William Ballard
Andrew Richard Bliss, Jr.
Salvatore Collica
[8]
Paul Jean Gillman
Theodore Arthur Jost
Julius Klepper
Reuben Washburne Sterritt
Doctor of Pharmacy
Frank George Bradtke, Ph.C.
Charles William Holzhauer,
Princeton, A.B.
[4]
Ph.C.
Charles Alexander Schenck.
Joseph Sidney Scheuer, Ph.C.
Thomas Marietta Abernathy
A. B., Nashville, 1904.
Eva Adeline Acken
B.S., 1906.
Howard Chester Ackerman
Colin Cuthbert Alexander
A.B., Wofford. 1904.
Master of Arts
George Deacon Allison
Ph.B., Brown, 1905.
John James Armstrong
Ph.B., Mt. Union, 1906.
Mary Louise Bancroft
A.B., Smith, 1902.
38o
DEGREES CONFERRED
Harry Erwin Bard
A.B.. Wabash, 1894; A.M., 1898.
Rose Mayard Barton
A.B., Cornell, 1893. (October 9).
John H. Bauer
A.B., Ohio Northern, 1896.
Mabel "Warren Baxter
A.B., Knox, 1899.
Edith Adelaide Beck
A.B., Woman's College, Baltimore,
1904.
Rudolph Conrad Becker
C. E., 1906, B.S., C. C. N. Y., 1903.
Aime Lawrence Beringer
A.B., Pennsylvania Coll. for Women,
1898.
Evis Howard Berry
A.B., Mt. Holyoke, 1903.
Chao Soule Bok
Equiv. A.B., Canton, China.
Mary Morrell Brackett
A.B., 1899.
Alice Dorothy Brewster
A.B., 1906.
Winifred Mary Bristol
B.S., Cornell, 1897.
William MacKellar Brittain
B.C.S. and LL.B., N. Y. Univ., 1906.
Parrand Dodd Brower
A.B., 1901.
John David Miller Brown
A.B., Muhlenberg, 1906.
Ethel Nicholson Browne
A.B., Woman's College, Baltimore
1906.
Thomas Quincy Browne, Jr.
A.B., Harvard, 1888.
William Sidney Bryant, Jr.
A.B., 1904.
Mabel Gray Burdick
A.B., Wellesley, 1906.
Rush Monroe Caldwell
A.B., Ouachita, 1903.
Asa Leroy Carter
LL.B., Missouri, 1905.
James Knight Christopher
B.S., Missouri School of Mines, 1905.
Linda Clarke-Smith
B.S., 1906.
Alexander Cohen
A.B..C.C. N.Y.,1906.
Orrok Colloque
A.B., Trinity, 1899; A.M., N. Y.
Univ., 1 90 1.
Clayton Sedgwick Cooper
A.B., Brown, 1894.
Percy Gaines Craig
A.B., Arkansas, 1906.
Mattie Holliday Craighill
A.B., Randolph-Macon, 1903.
Katharine Priest Crane
B.L., Smith, 1897.
John Herbert Crippen
A.B., Leland Stanford, 1901.
Nancy Jane Criswell
A.B., Wilson, 1889.
William Theodore Darby
A.B., Yale, 1905.
Robert Davis
A.B., Dartmouth, 1903.
Pauline Hamilton Dederer
A.B., 1901.
Pinakiprasad Mahadeoprasad Desai
A.B., Bombay, 1901.
Maneckji Nusservanji Dhalla
A.B., Bombay, 1904.
Samuel Ward Dodd
M.D., 1905; B.S., Princeton, 1901.
Sarah Eleanor Dudley
A.B., Vassar, 1897.
William Burns Duff
A.B., Wabash, 1906.
Lucius Aaron Edelblute
A.B., Kenyon, 1904.
Louis Isaac Egelson
A.B., C. C. N. Y., 1904.
Margaret Eves
B.L., Swarthmore, 1900.
Dean Spruill Fansler
A.B., Northwestern, 1906.
Helen Christine Fellows
A.B., Wilson, 1906.
Robert Anthony Ferrari
A.B., 1905.
Joseph Hector Fezandie
E.M., Stevens, 1875.
Henry Baldwin Fischer
Ph.B., Yale, 1904.
Edward Augustus Fitzpatrick
B.S., 1906.
Jennie Young Freeman
A.B., Boston, 1900.
Louise Marie Fulda
A.B., Adelphi, 1905. (December 1 1).
Ida Gray Gallaway
Ph.B., California, 1892.
Hohannes Barker Garabedian
B.D., Union Seminary, 1899.
Wayland Dunn Gates
A.B., Hillsdale, 1903; B.D., Roch-
ester Seminary, 1906.
Marie Gelbach
A.B., 1906.
DEGREES CONFERRED
38l
William Churchill Gerrish
A.B., Harvard, 1899.
Emmett E. Giltner
A.B., Indiana, 1904.
Eunice Rathbone Goddard
A.B., Mt. Holyoke, 1903.
Theodora Goldsmith
A.B., Adelphi, 1901.
Asahel Henry Grant
A.B., Yale, 1896.
Henry Blair Graybill
A.B., Washington and Lee, 1902.
Louise Hoyt Gregory
A.B., Vassar, 1903.
Joseph Marr Gwinn
A.B., Missouri, 1902.
Caroline Hadley
A.B., Swarthmore, 1906.
Harold Harper
A.B., 1905.
Janet Newland Harris
Ph.B., Syracuse, 1901.
Alfred Williams Haywood, Jr.
A.B., North Carolina, 1904.
Josephine Woodbury Heermans
A.B., Park, 1905.
Ethel' Hendricks
A.B., 1905.
Senta Herrmann
A.B., 1906.
Margaret Louise Hewitt
A.B., Wellesley, 1897.
Benjamin Alexander Heydrick
A.B., Harvard, 1895.
Helen Hill
A.B., Vassar, 1905.
Frederick Charles Hinkel, Jr.
B.S., Trinity, 1906.
Esther Hirschensohn
Equiv. A. B., Teachers College, Paris,
1903.
Nina Hirschensohn
Equiv. A.B., Teachers College, Paris
1901.
Simon Hirsdansky
B.S., C. C. N. Y., 1899. (December
n).
Abel Hirsh
Equiv. A.B', Bethha-Midrasch,
Frankfurt, 1903.
Kentok Hori
Equiv. A.M., Imperial Univ. of
Tokio, 1899.
Byron Barnes Horton
B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1895.
Jesse Earl Hyde
A.B., Ohio State, 1906.
Seiichi Ishimuka
Equiv. A.B., Keiogiziku Univ., 189
Bennett Barron Jackson
A.B., Beloit, 1890.
George Leroy Jackson
A.B., Michigan, 1906.
Royal Preston Jarvis
E.M., Colorado School of Mines, 1897
Anabel Johnson
A.B., Elmira, 1890.
Hamilton Chamberlain Jones
A.B., North Carolina, 1906.
Isya Joseph
A.B., 1906; B.D., Union Seminary
1906.
Kaunosuke Kawanaka
Equiv. A.B., Tohoku Gakwin, 1899.
Rowena Keith Keyes
A.B., Mt. Holyoke, 1902.
Alice Cynthia King
B.S., 1906.
Joseph Waldo Kingsbury
B.S., Utah, 1903.
Alice Adelaide Knox
A.B., Smith, 1899. (November 13).
Shun Tet Kong
B.S., California, 1905.
Henry Alfred Levy
A.B..C. C. N. Y., 1900.
Robert Carpenter Lewis
A.B., 1905.
Cornelius Wygant Lockwood
B.S., Harvard, 1899.
Frank Carlton Loring
B.S., Purdue, 1904.
Theodore Russell Ludlow
A.B., Austin, 1903.
Franklin Clark McGill
A.B., Washington and Jefferson,
1897; A.M., 1900.
John Cole McKim
A.B., Kenyon, 1904. (December 11).
Joseph Alden McKnight
A.B. .Denver, 1905.
Maud Ethel Manfred
A.B., Cornell, 1900. (October 9).
Mary Louise Mark
A.B., Ohio State, 1903.
Mary Elizabeth Markley
A.B., Ursinus, 1902.
Theodore McCurdy Marsh
A.B., Yale, 1904.
John Angus Campbell Mason
A.B., Toronto, 190s.
Charles Clarence Meyer
B.L., California, 1906.
382
DEGREES CONFERRED
Catherine Ann Miller
A.B., Chicago, 1903; B.D., Hartford,
1900.
Maud Emma Miner
A.B., Smith, 1901. (November 13).
Bell Woods Montgomery
A.B., Winthrop, 1901.
Julie Mathilde Morrow
A.B., Wellesley, 1904. (December
11).
Joseph Albert Mosher
Ph.B., Syracuse, 190s; Ph.M., 1906.
William Marsiglia Nesbit
A.B., 1902; B.D., Drew, 1905.
Harvey Newcomer
A.B., Franklin and Marshall, 1892;
A.M., 1895.
John Harrison Nolan
A.B., Dartmouth, 1904.
Alice May Ober
A.B., Smith, 1905.
Alice Browning Paige
A.B., Boston, 1893.
Helen Letitia Palliser
A.B., 1905.
Harriet Eliza Patch
B.L., Smith, 1897.
Robert Gildersleeve Paterson
A.B. Ohio State, 1905.
Frank Allen Patterson
A.B., Syracuse, 1904.
Edith M. Penney
B.L., Minnesota, 1898.
Louise Edgar Peters
A.B., 1904.
William Redfield Porter
A.B., 1906.
William Louis Rabenort
B.S., 1906.
Miles Frank. Reed
B.S., Idaho, 1901.
John Monroe Reid
A.B., Denver, 1904; LL.B., 1906.
Alfred Ernst Rejall
A.B., 1906.
Florence Saeger Richards
B.S., 1905.
Frank Humphrey Ristine
A.B., Wabash, 1905; A.M., 1906.
Frederick William Roberts
A.B., Vermont, 1896; B.D., Cam-
bridge (Mass.), 1900.
Franklin Whitman Robinson, B.S.,
C. C. N. Y., 1895.
Mabel Louise Robinson
Equiv. A.B., Radcliffe, 1903.
Helen Erma Rogers
A.B. , Allegheny, 1903.
Lester Burton Rogers
B.S., Moore's Hill, 1899.
Lawrence Erastus Rudisill
A. B., North Carolina, 1904.
Caroline Ruutz-Rees
L.L.A., St. Andrews, Scotland, 1904.
Charles Ryttenberg
A. B., South Carolina, 1902.
Norman Pulver Stevens Schloss
A.B..C. C. N. Y., 1904.
Joseph Schottland
A.B..C.C. N. Y., 1904.
Lewis Schuldenfrei
LL.B., 1905.
Herbert Ferlando Schwarz
A.B., Harvard, 1904; A.M., 1905.
Andrew Edward Scott
A.B., Harvard, 1902.
Emily Cromwell Seaman
B.S., Adelphi, 1899.
Richard Eli Sherman
A.B., Missouri Valley, 1900; B.D.,
Cumberland, 1903.
Ellis R. Shipp
A.B., Utah, 1901.
Clara Shuart
A.B., Oberlin, 1901.
Catherine Mae Simonton
A.B., Wesleyan, 1900.
J. Edwin Sinclair
B.S., 1906.
Benjamin Franklin Sisk
B.S., Valparaiso, 1890; M.S., 1894;
B.S., Texas, 1905. (October 5).
Winifred Smith
A.B., Vassar, 1904.
Glen Lawson Sneed
B.S., Texas A. and M., 1898; A.B.,
Trinity (Texas), 1904.
Orrin Wilmer Snodgrass
A.B., N. Y. Univ., 189s; B.D.,Drew,
1898.
Edward Frederic Spitz
A.B., 1906.
Ada Springer
B.S., 1906.
Maud Johanna Staber
B.S., 1901.
Caroline Emorettb Stackpolb
B.S., 1906.
Louise Stanley
B.S., Peabody, 1903; B.E., Chicago,
1906.
Albert William Staub
A.B., Oberlin, 1904.
DEGREES CONFERRED
;83
Clarence Dimick Stevens
Ph.B. and B.S., Wabash, 1894;
A.M., 1900.
Charles Arthur Stewart
A.B., 1906.
James Leroy Stockton
A.B., 1906.
Lorin Stuckey
A.B., Miami, 1906.
Thomas Kirkbride Sturdevant
B.S., Princeton, 1901. (April 9).
Aijiro Tanaka
Equiv. A. B., Yokohama Commercial,
1901.
Charles Edward Taylor
B.S., Case, 1906.
Mary Reamey Thomas
A.B., Trinity (N. C), 1906.
Clara Mildred Thompson
A.B., Vassar, 1903.
Nanna M. Tompkins
A.B., Vassar, 1894.
Benjamin Abner Tintner
A.B., 1903.
Helen Augusta Tucker
A.B., Smith, 1895.
[190 J
Joseph Lawrence Tynan
A.B., C.C.N. Y., 1901.
Clifford Brewster Upton
A.B., Michigan, 1902.
Axel Reynold Wallin
A.B., Augustana, 1902.
Morris Francis Weinrich
Mech.E., 1904.
Walter George Whitman
A.B., Tufts, 1898.
Ralph Libby Wiggin
A.B., Bowdoin, 1898.
Lawrence Augustus Wilkins
Ph.B., Syracuse, 1904.
Edith Wilkinson
A.B., Wellesley, 1888.
Maud Wilkinson
A. B., Wellesley, 1889.
Sarah Holbrook Williams
A.B., Smith, 1894
Hugh Dempster Wilson, Jr.
A.B., Trinity, 1901.
Ernest Hunter Wright
A.B.. 1905.
Doctor of Philosophy
Eugene Ewald Agger
A.B., Cincinnati, 1901; A.M., 1902'
Dissertation: The budget in the
American commonwealth.
(April 9).
Henry Kreitzer Benson
A.B., Franklin and Marshall, 1899;
A.M., 1902.
Dissertation: On the use of molten
salts containing water of crystalliza-
tion as solvents.
William Nathan Berg
B.S., 1904.
Dissertation: The digestibility of vari-
ous proteins in solutions of the same
acids.
Abraham Berglund
A. B., Chicago, 1904.
Dissertation: The United States Steel
Corporation.
Norris Arthur Brisco
A.B., Queens University, 1898; A.M.,
1900.
Dissertation: Economic policy of
Robert Walpole.
Louis Jacob Cohen
B.S., C. C. N. Y., 1899; M.S., N. Y.
Univ., 1902.
Dissertation: Some new double
phosphates.
Percival Richard Cole
A.B., Sydney, 1903; A.M., 1905.
Dissertation: Herbart and Froebel:
An attempt at synthesis.
Jesse Harliaman Coursault
A.B., Ohio State, 1893; A.M., 1898;
A.M., Harvard, 1900.
Dissertation: The learning process or
educational theory implied in theory
of knowledge.
George Henry Danton
A.B., 1902.
Dissertation: The nature sense in the
writings of Ludwig Tieck.
Ellen Scott Davison
B.S., Wellesley, 1887; A.M., Western
Reserve, 1894.
Dissertation: The history of ecclesi-
astical elections.
Frederick Carl Eiselen
A.M., New York Univ., 1899; B.D.
Drew, 1900.
Dissertation: Sidon — A study in Ori-
ental history.
James Henry Gilbert
A.B., Oregon, 1903.
384
DEGREES CONFERRED
Dissertation: Trade and currency in
early Oregon.
William Buck Guthrie
B.S., Lenox, 1893; Ph. B., State Univ.,
Iowa, 1893.
Dissertation: History of socialistic
thought from the Reformation to the
French Revolution.
Paul Leland Haworth
A.B., Indiana, 1899; A.M., 1901.
Dissertation: The presidential elec-
tion of 1876.
(December 11).
Meyer Jacobstein
A.B., 1904; A.M., 1905.
Dissertation: The tobacco industry
in the United States.
Margaret Edith Henry Johnson
A.B., Nebraska, 1898; A.M., 1900;
A.M., Radcliffe, 1902.
Dissertation: The argument of Aris-
totle's " Metaphysics. "
(October 9).
Arthur Julius Jones
A.B., Iowa Coll., 1893.
Dissertation: The continuation-school
movement in the United States.
William Klaber
A.B. 1905.
Dissertation: On certain 7-nitro-4-
quinazolones.
Elsie Kupfer
A.B., 1899; A.M., 1901.
Dissertation: Studies in plant regen-
eration.
Albert Buell Lewis
A.B., Chicago, 1894.
Dissertation: Tribes of the Columbia
Valley.
(November 13).
Abram Lipsky
A.M., 1900; A.B., Rochester, 1895
Dissertation: Rhythm as a distin-
guishing characteristic of prose style-
Louise Ropes Loomis
A.M., 1902; A.B., Wellesley, 1897.
Dissertation: Mediaeval Hellenism.
(April 9).
Howard Lee McBain
A.M., 1905; A.B., Richmond, 1900;
A.M., 1901.
Dissertation: The life of De Witt
Clinton.
Robert Cecil McMahon
A.M., 1901, A.B., Wesleyan, 1900.
Dissertation: Technical history of
the white lecythi.
Martin Abraham Meyer
A.B., Cincinnati, 1899; B.D., Hebrew-
Union, 1 90 1.
Dissertation: History of Geza from
the earliest times to the present day.
Samuel Erasmus Moppett
A.B., 1900; A.M., 1901.
Dissertation: The Indian policy of
the American colonies to 1690.
David Saville Muzzey
A.B., Harvard, 1893; B.D., N. Y.
Univ., 1897.
Dissertation: The spiritual Francis-
cans.
(April 9).
John Maurice Nelson
B.S., Nebraska, 1901.
Dissertation: Some compounds de-
rived from succinylosuccinic ester.
Nuba Mitchell Pletcher
A.B., Illinois, 1901; A.M., 1903.
Dissertation: Franco-German rela-
tions in the seventeenth century.
Oscar Lewis Pond
A.M., 1902; A.B., Indiana, 1899.
Dissertation: Municipal control of
public utilities.
(February 12).
Raemer Rex Renshaw
B.S., Oregon, 1902; M.S., 1903.
Dissertation: 4 - aminophthalic acid
and some of its derivatives.
William Carl Ruediger
Ph.B., Wisconsin, 1899; Ph.M., 1903.
Dissertation: The field of distinct vis-
ion.
Charles H. Shamel
A.M., 190s; B.S., Illinois, 1890; M.S.,
i89i;LL.B., Michigan, 1893.
Dissertation: Geology in the law.
Preserved Smith
A.M., 1902; A.B., Amherst, 1901.
Dissertation: Luther's Table-Talks as
an historical source.
David S. Snedden
A.M., 1901; A.B., Leland Stanford,
1887.
Dissertation: Administration and
educational work of American re-
form schools.
(April 9).
Guy Edward Snider
B.L., Wisconsin, 1901; A.M., Mis-
souri, 1902.
Dissertation: The taxation of the
gross receipts of railways in Wis-
consin.
DEGREES CONFERRED 3^5
Charles Rupert Stockard heating, burning, and restoring of
B.S., Mississippi Agricultural and nickel steel.
Mechanical, 1899; M.S., 1902. (February 12).
Dissertation: The development of Charles Clarence Williamson
the mouth and gills in Bdellostoma A. B., Western Reserve, 1904.
Stanti. Dissertation: The finances of Cleve-
Alvan Alonzo Tenney land.
A.B., 1898; A.M., 1899. Anne Sewell Young
Dissertation: Social democracy and B.L., Carleton, 1892; M.S., 1897.
population. Dissertation: The stellar clusters h
George Booker Waterhouse and x Persii; measurement and re-
B.S., London, 1903. duction of the Rutherfurd photo-
Dissertation: The influence of nickel graphs,
and carbon in iron and The over- (October 9).
[41J
HONORARY DEGREES
Master of Science
Charles Gordon Curtis
Master of Arts
The Reverend Hugh McCulloh Birckhead
Rector of St. George's Church
John Aaron Browning
Headmaster of the Browning School
Wilson Farrand
Headmaster of the Newark Academy
Doctor of Letters
Richard Watson Gilder
Doctor of Laws
Henry Fairfield Osborn
Da Costa Professor of Zoology
Elmer Ellsworth Brown
United States Commissioner of Education
Charles Evans Hughes
Governor of New York
Commencement Calendar, 1907
May 24-25 — Teachers College Exhibition.
June 7 — Barnard College Class Day.
June 9 — Baccalaureate Service, Rev. George Hodges, D.D.,
D.C.L., Preacher.
June 10 — Columbia College Class Day.
June 10-16 — Architectural Exhibition.
June 1 1 — Phi Beta Kappa Meeting and Address.
June 1 2 — Commencement, Conferring of Degrees and Award
of Honors; Presentation of torcheres by Class
of '82 Science and of Window by Class of '82
College; Alumni Luncheons; Anniversary Din-
ners; Decennial Celebration.
FELLOWSHIPS, SCHOLARSHIPS, AND OTHER PROVISION FOR
THE ASSISTANCE AND REWARD OF STUDENTS
NOTE. — Unless otherwise provided, all stipends of Fellows and Scholars shall be paid
in equal semi-annual instalments on the second Wednesday of each half-year. Be-
fore being entitled to receive either instalment of his stipend, each Fellow and Scholar
is required to report himself in writing to the Registrar as in residence, on or before
the opening day of each half-year.
Fellows and Scholars are required to pay all fees for matriculation, tuition, graduation,
and for the use of the Gymnasium. The provisions regarding the maximum fee for the
higher degrees do not apply to them.
General Regulations
The following regulations apply, unless the contrary is specifically
stated, to the award of all fellowships and scholarships:
In each case application must be made in writing on a blank pre-
pared for the purpose which may be obtained from the Secretary of
the University : for fellowships it should be filed on or before March i ;
for scholarships on or before May i. Applications and documents
received in support thereof later than these dates or not distinctly in-
dicating the name of the candidate and the fellowship or scholarship
for which he applies may fail of consideration. As an evidence of
graduation, a printed certificate is preferable to the formal diploma it-
self as there is risk that the latter may be lost or injured in transit.
The appointment is in each case for one year dating from July i.
Candidates will be notified as promptly as possible as to the success
of their applications. If the applicant wishes the documents which
he has submitted returned to him by mail he should enclose postage
for the purpose, otherwise they will be held until called for.
All Fellows and Scholars, as hereinafter provided, shall reside in
New York City or its vicinity during the academic year, unless per-
mission be granted by the Council to study elsewhere. No Fellow
or Scholar may pursue a professional or technical course of study
during his term.
The conditions under which the appointment may be granted are
indicated in the following paragraphs:
UNIVERSITY FELLOWSHIPS
Twelve fellowships, of the value of $650 each, known as "Univer-
sity Fellowships, " are awarded annually by the University Council at
its stated meeting in April, to those graduates of colleges and scientific
schools, not over thirty years of age, who show themselves especially
386
FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS 387
fitted to pursue courses of higher study and original investigation.
The candidate must give evidence:
(a) of a liberal education, such as a diploma from a college or sci-
entific school of good repute;
(6) of decided fitness for a special line of study, such as an example
of some scientific or literary work already performed;
(c) of upright character, such as a testimonial from some instructor.
A Fellow may be reappointed for reasons of weight, but not for more
than two terms of one year each.
As these fellowships are awarded as honors, those who are disposed,
for the benefit of others or for any other reason, to waive the pecuniary
emolument, may do so, and still have their names retained on the list
of Fellows. In such cases additional University Fellows may be
appointed.
Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner in which original ap-
pointments are made.
Every Fellow will be expected to perform such duties as may be
allotted to him in connection with a course of study leading to the
degree of Doctor of Philosophy. He will be expected to devote his
time to the prosecution of special studies under the direction of the
head of the department in which his major subject lies, and before the
close of the academic year to give evidence of progress by the prepara-
tion of a thesis, the completion of a research, the delivery of a lecture,
or by some other method.
No Fellow shall be allowed to accept remunerative employment
or to give instruction or assistance in any department of the University
except by permission of the President, and the acceptance of any such
employment, without such permission, shall operate to vacate the
fellowship.
University Fellows, igoj-08:
George Byron Louis Arner Sociology
Warren B. Catlin : Political Economy
William Watson Davis American History
Thomas Green Philosophy
Jesse Earl Hyde Geology
David Kelley Lambuth English
Albert Arthur Livingston Romance Languages
Daniel Ralph Lucas Biological Chemistry
Clarence Earl May Organic Chemistry
Arthur George Thomas International Law
Axel Reynold Wallin Latin
Leon Elmer Woodman Physics
Honorary Fellow:
John Maurice Clark Political Economy
388 FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS
SPECIAL FELLOWSHIPS
Unless otherwise specified, the regulations as to the mode of applica-
tion for the following fellowships, and the conditions governing their
award and tenure, are the same as those for University fellowships
(see ante). Candidates should indicate clearly upon their application-
blanks the fellowship for which they are applicants.
Tyndall and Barnard Fellowships
The Tyndall Fellowship for the Encouragement of Research in
Physics, endowed by Professor John Tyndall, and of an annual value
of $648, and the Barnard Fellowship for Encouraging Scientific Re-
search, endowed by the bequest of the late President Barnard, annual
value $400, are awarded annually under the following conditions: The
Tyndall Fellowship is available for one or more American pupils who
may have shown decided talent in physics, and preferably such as shall
express the determination to devote their lives to the advancement of
theoretic science and original investigations in that department of
learning, and is awarded either to a graduate of the University or to a
student in it (not necessarily a candidate for a degree) upon the recom-
mendation of the head of the Department of Physics. The Barnard
Fellowship is awarded upon the joint recommendation of the Faculties
of Columbia College, Applied Science, and Pure Science to a graduate
of any one of them who, having shown decided aptness for physical
investigation, is disposed to devote himself thereto for some years
continuously. The recommendation must in each case be made to the
President on or before April 1 . The appointment is for the term of one
year, but the incumbent shall be eligible to reappointment.
It is the duty of a John Tyndall or Barnard Fellow to devote him-
self faithfully to the investigation of some subject in physical science
at this University, or at some other in this country or abroad, under
the supervision of some known physicist approved by the President
and the head of the Department of Physics. He shall make a report,
certified to by the physicist superintending and directing him, quar-
terly to the President, giving an account of the work in which he has
been engaged during the three months preceding.
Tyndall Fellows:
1891-92 William H. Freedman 1898-1901 Robert Bowie Owens
1892-93 Charles R. Mann 1901-03 Bergen Davis
1894-95 Charles R. Mann 1903-04 Frank Leo Tufts
1895-97 Walter Wheeler Cook 1904-07 Frederic Columbus
1987-98 No incumbent Blake
1907-08 George Braxton Pegram
Barnard Fellows:
1894-96 William Lispenard Robb 1896-97 No incumbent
FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS 389
1897-1900 Heinrich Ries 1905-07 Clarence Whitney
1900-03 John Alexander Mathews Kanolt
1903-05 William Campbell 1907-08 Harold Worthington
Webb
Adams Research Fellowship
The Ernest Kempton Adams Research Fellowship, founded by
Mr. Edward Dean Adams, in memory of his son, Ernest Kempton
Adams, E. E. '97, A.M. '98, is of an annual value of $1250. The ap-
pointment may be made from among the faculties, teaching staff,
alumni, or students of Columbia University. The incumbent of the
fellowship shall prosecute researches either in Columbia University
or elsewhere, in the physical sciences, in psychology, or in their prac-
tical applications. The results of the investigations of the incumbent
of the fellowship are published and distributed by the University
under the title of "Researches of the Ernest Kempton Adams Re-
search Fellows of Columbia University. "
Ernest Kempton Adams Research Fellows:
1905-07 Ernest Fox Nichols 1907-08 Bergen Davis
Class of '70 Fellowship
There is a fellowship known as the "Class of '70 Fellowship," of the
annual value of $500, which, after the expiration of the term of the
present incumbent, shall be filled by the University Council, subject to
such regulations as may be prescribed.
Class of '70 Fellow:
1896 — Lewis Buffet Carll
George William Curtis Fellowship
The George William Curtis Fellowship is awarded for a term of two
years upon the recommendation of the Faculty of Political Science in
every third year, the next award being July 1, 1909. The Curtis
Fellow shall be entitled to receive during his incumbency the net in-
come of the endowment of $10,000 (in 1906-07, $400 annually), ac-
cruing during a period of three years, and proportionately for any
part of the term.
Candidates shall submit an essay or address on the "Immediate
Duty of the American Citizen, " in addition to complying with the
requirements of candidates for University fellowships.
The Fellow shall devote himself to the study of the science of gov-
ernment, with a special view to its application to the then existing
condition of the United States or to the State or City of New York;
and at or before the conclusion of his second year he shall publish (a) a
monograph satisfactory to the Faculty of Political Science on some
39° FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS
subject relating thereto, and (6) a brief sketch of George William
Curtis as a citizen and orator, showing that he has familiarized himself
with the life and character of the man whose memory is to be per-
petuated by the fellowship which he has enjoyed.
George William Curtis Fellows:
1901-02 James Wilford Garner 1904-06 Charles Grove Haines
1902-04 Charles Austin Beard 1907-09 Edward McChesney Salt
Drisler Fellowship
The Henry Drisler Fellowship in Classical Philology, established in
1894 in commemoration of the semi-centennial in the service of the
University of Professor Henry Drisler, A.B. 1839, is of the annual
value of $650, and is open to Bachelors of Arts of this University, or
some other institution of equivalent standing, who have studied Greek
and Latin throughout their undergraduate course, and who have an
adequate knowledge of French and German. They must present tes-
timonials from their instructors in Greek and Latin as to the quality
of their work, and give evidence of fitness for advanced study and
research, either by a special examination, or by an essay embodying
the results of research in some department of classical study.
The appointment is made by the University Council on the joint
recommendation of the professors of Greek and Latin. Recommenda-
tions should reach the President on or before April 1, and reappoint-
ments may be made for not more than two terms of one year each.
The Fellow must study at this University under the direction of the
professors of Greek and Latin, unless permitted by the Council to
spend a year in some foreign university, or in the American School of
Classical Studies at Athens, or in the American School of Classical
Studies at Rome.
Drisler Fellows
1894-96 John Kasson Lathrop 1901-02 No incumbent
1896-97 George N. Olcott 1902-03 Harwood Hoadley
1897-98 William T. F. Tamblyn 1903-04 Walter Whipple Ar-
1898-99 Corliss Fitz Randolph nold
1899-1900 Edward Charles 1904-05 No incumbent
Harwood 1905-06 Macon Anderson Leiper
1900-01 Bert Hodge Hill 1906-08 Charles Jones Ogden
Garth Fellowship
The Granville W. Garth Fellowship in Political Economy is awarded
each year. The successful applicant for the fellowship shall be en-
titled to receive the net annual income of the capital sum of the
Granville W. Garth Memorial Fund of $16,250. See page 435
FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS 391
Gar tit Fellows:
1905-06 Meyer Jacobstein 1906-07 James Henry Gilbert
1907-08 Louis Dwight Harwell Weld
Gottsberger Fellowship
The Gottsberger Fellowship, awarded every second year, is open
only to candidates who, having first taken a degree in Columbia
College, have been for not less than two years resident graduate
students of Columbia University, taking also the degree of Master
of Arts. The holder may with the consent of the professor in charge
of his major subject of study, and with the approval of the President,
pursue his studies abroad. The Fellow so appointed receives the net
income for two years of the capital sum of $9500 constituting the
Cornelius Heeney Gottsberger Scholarship Fund.
Gottsberger Fellows:
1905-06 George Christian Otto Haas 1907-08 Meyer Jacobstein
Mosenthal Fellowship
The Mosenthal Fellowship, established in memory of the late Joseph
Mosenthal, is designed to aid talented students of musical composi-
tion, either men or women, in the study of their art. The stipend is
the net income for two years of the capital sum of $7500. It is awarded
every second year by the Council upon the recommendation of the
Professor of Music, and is tenable for one year.
Applicants are. required to show a thorough knowledge of harmony
and of counterpoint and some ability to compose, by submitting a
number of original compositions in support of their applications.
The holder must devote himself to the study of musical composition
at Columbia University, or, with the approval of the President and the
Professor of Music, abroad. In the former case, he shall be required,
in addition to his studies in Music, to pursue such other studies in at
least two departments of the University as the Professor of Music
may direct. In either case, the Fellow shall submit, at such times
as the Professor of Music may designate, the results of his work in
musical compotsiion.
Mosenthal Fellows:
1899-1901 Mary Angela Diller 1904-05 Benjamin Lambord
1902-04 Frank Edwin Ward 1906-07 William Jacob Kraft
Proudfit Fellowship in Letters
The Alexander Moncrief Proudfit Fellowship in Letters for the
encouragement of the study of English Literature, founded by the
392 FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS
bequest of Alexander Moncrief Proudfit, is open to any son of native-
born American parents who shall have taken the degree of Bachelor
of Arts after three years' residence in Columbia College, and who shall,
while enjoying such fellowship, remain unmarried. The appointment
is made by the Council upon the joint recommendation of the professors
in the Department of English. The Fellow shall be entitled to receive
during his incumbency the net income of the sum of $13,875 (in
1906-07, $615). He shall carry on his studies and research at Columbia
University, or elsewhere, under the direction of the professors in
the department named.
Proudfit Fellows in Letters:
1900-03 John Erskine 1906-07 Charles Francis Law-
1903-05 Stanley Kidder Wilson son
1905-06 No incumbent 1907-08 Ernest Hunter Wright
Schiff Fellowship
The Schiff Fellowship in Political Science, the gift of Mr. Jacob H.
Schiff, is of an annual value of $600. The appointment is made each
year by the Council upon the recommendation of the Faculty of Po-
litical Science, which recommendation is based upon the nomination
following: On or before April 1 of each academic year the Faculty of
Political Science shall propose to Mr. Jacob H. Schiff while living the
name of a suitable person for nomination by him. The conditions to
govern the nomination after Mr. Schiff's death will be found in the
University Statutes.
Schiff Fellows:
1898-1900 William Henry Fry 1905-06 Charles Ramsdell
1900-01 Walter Percy Bordwell Lingley
1901-02 Ulrich Bonnell Phillips 1906-07 Samuel George Nis-
1902-03 George Charles Selden senson
1903-04 Preserved Smith 1907-08 Carl Frederick L.
1904-05 Norris Arthur Brisco Huth
Carl Schurz Fellowship
The Carl Schurz Fellowship for the Study of the German Language
and Literature is awarded, in every even-numbered year, by the
Council, upon the recommendation of the professors of the Department
of Germanic Languages and Literatures. The Fellow shall be en-
titled to receive the net income for two years of the capital sum of
$10,000, constituting the endowment contributed by citizens of New
York, in commemoration of the seventieth birthday of Carl Schurz.
The appointment may be renewed for reasons of weight for a further
term of one year, but without additional stipend.
FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS 393
Candidates must present testimonials as to their zeal and success
in the study of German, and must by an essay or published treatise
give evidence of their fitness for a wider and more profound study of
the language and literature and for independent research. They
must also have a sufficient knowledge of Latin and French to use
these languages readily in the prosecution of their studies. The
holder must study at Columbia University under the direction of the
Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures, unless permitted
by the Council to study at some German university.
Carl Schurz Fellows:
1Q02-03 John Louis Kind 1906-07 Henry Hermann
1905-06 Allen Wilson Porterfield Louis Schulze
Annual Fellowships
The Treasurer may receive gifts of money or fellowships for one
year or more, provided that no fellowship shall be created for less than
$500 per annum. Such fellowship shall he filled by the University
Council, subject to such regulations as may be prescribed.
UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIPS
Twenty University Scholarships, of an annual value of $150, are
awarded by the University Council at the regular meeting in May to
students under the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and
Pure Science, who are not over thirty years of age, under the following
regulations :
1. They are open to all graduates of colleges and scientific schools
whose course of study has been such as to entitle them to be enrolled
at Columbia as candidates for one of the higher degrees.
2. They are tenable for one academic year, with a possibility of
renewal for one year longer.
3. Applications should be filed in writing, not later than May 1.
4. In the awards preference will be given to those candidates for
University fellowships who have failed of appointment after having
been recommended therefor by any faculty or department.
5. University Scholars will be required to enrol themselves as can-
didates for a higher degree and to pursue a regular course of study
leading thereto.
6. Additional Scholars may be appointed by the Committee to fill
any vacancies occurring otherwise than by the graduation of an in-
cumbent.
7. A University Scholar may relinquish the income thereof without
waiving his right to be designated as a University Scholar.
394 FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS
University Scholars, iqoj-o8:
Francis Freeman Adams Chemistry
Ervin Leech Anderson Romance Philology
Samuel Alfred Barrett Anthropology
Leonard Stott Blakey Economics and Social Science
George Henry Brunson History
Percy Gaines Craig Germanic Languages
Horace Luther Field Greek
George Wallace Kneisly Geology
Edward Henry Lewinski Economics
Edmund Rutan Lupton Economics
Joseph Albert Mosher English
William Stockton Nelms Physics
Fernandus Payne Zoology
Joseph Pearl Latin
George Henry Porter American History
Edward Ewing Pratt Economics
Albert Edward Rand German
Frank Rosenblatt Political Economy
Solomon Vineberg Economics
President's University Scholarships
Eight additional scholarships, known as the President's University
Scholarships, are awarded by the University Council, governed by the
regulations attached to the University Scholarships, and by such
further regulations as may from time to time be adopted.
President's University Scholars, igoy-08:
Faust Charles DeWalsh Germanic Languages
Edward Hall Gardner English
William Churchill Gerrish Medimval History
Alfred Peirce Lothrop Chemistry
James Insley Osborne English
Frank Humphrey Ristine English
Charles McGibeny Roberts Administrative Law
Claude Cornelius Van Nuys Mathematics
University Scholarships for Women
Four University Scholarships, known as the Curtis University
Scholarships, will be awarded annually to women students under the
Faculties of Philosophy, Political Science, and Pure Science. These
scholarships are awarded under the same regulations as those govern-
ing the University scholarships.
Curtis University Scholars, IQ07-08:
Cora Leila Butler Mathematics
FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS 395
Carrie Maude Holt Zoology
Beatrice Lessey Romance Languages
Annie Laurie Manley Philosophy
Charlotte Rose Oesterlein (Honorary) Philosophy
special scholarships
Richard Butler Scholarship
The Richard Butler Scholarship, tenable for one academic year,
with the possibility of renewal for each of two years more, for the
benefit of male students born in the State of Ohio, is open for com-
petition to qualified candidates who propose to enter any college, or
school of the University (except Teachers College or the College of
Pharmacy). The annual value (to be applied to tuition charges) is the
income of a fund of $5000, given for the establishment of the scholar-
ship.
Applications should be made under the same regulations as those
for University Scholarships.
Richard Butler Scholars:
1904-07 Otho Lee Monroe 1907-08 John Sherman Robinson
Pulitzer Scholarships
Through the generosity of Mr. Joseph Pulitzer, male graduates
of the public high-schools of the City of New York, not to exceed
forty at any time, are awarded scholarships upon competitive ex-
amination. Each scholarship so awarded may be held for a period
of four years in the College or in any department of the University
except the Medical School. The scholarship will be withdrawn if at
any time the holder fails to maintain a satisfactory standard in his
academic work. During his term the scholar receives from Mr.
Pulitzer the sum of $250 a year over and above the cost of his tuition.
Full information regarding the conditions under which these scholar-
ships are awarded will be furnished, upon application, by the Secretary
of the University.
John D. Jones Scholarship
The Wawepex Society makes annual provision for a scholarship
amounting to $200 and including the use of a table at the biological
laboratory at Cold Spring Harbor, L. I. The award is made by the
Council upon the recommendation of the Department of Zoology.
I
John D. Jones Scholars:
1898-99 Francis Bertody Sumner 1900-01 Frederick Clark
1899-1900 John Cutler Torrey Paulmier
1901-02 William E. Kellicott
396 FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS
1902-03 Charles Zeleny 1905-06 John Howard McGregor
1903-04 Louis I. Dublin 1906-07 David Day Whitney
1904-05 Charles Rupert 1907-08 Charles V. Morrill, Jr.
Stockard
Annual Scholarships
The Treasurer may receive gifts of money for scholarships for one
or more years, provided that no such scholarship shall be for a less
sum than the annual tuition fee of the college or of the school in which
it is provided.
Medals and Prizes
Essays submitted in competition for any of the following should,
unless otherwise indicated, be submitted to the Secretary of the Uni-
versity not later than May 1, in the year of award. The awards are
announced at Commencement and, unless otherwise indicated, are
annual.
National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution Medal
For -information as to the award of the medals offered by this Society,
apply to the Secretary of the University.
Barnard Medal
A gold medal of the value of $200 established by the provisions
of the will of President Barnard and endowed by him, known as the
"Barnard Medal for Meritorious Service to Science," is awarded
quinquennially to such person, if any, whether a citizen of the United
States or any other country, as shall within the five years next pre-
ceding have made such discovery in physical or astronomical science,
or such novel application of science to purposes beneficial to the
human race, as in the judgment of the National Academy of Sciences
of the United States shall be esteemed most worthy of such honor.
Awards
1895 Lord Rayleigh and Professor William Ramsay
1900 Professor Wilhelm Conrad von Rontgen
1905 Professor Henri Becquerel
Bennett Prize
A prize established through a gift of $1000 from Mr. James Gor-
don Bennett, may be awarded by the Faculty of Political Science for
the best essay upon some subject of contemporaneous interest in the
domestic or foreign policy of the United States, the subject for 1907-
08 being " The Hague Conference of 1907." The competition is open
MEDALS AND PRIZES 397
to students not holding a baccalaureate degree who pursue courses
amounting to six hours a week in the School of Political Science.
No Award in 1907
Bunner Medal
The H. C. Bunner Gold Medal, established by the friends of the late
Henry Cuyler Bunner, is awarded to the candidate for a Columbia
degree who shall present the best essay on an assigned subject in
American literature. The award will be made by a committee to be
appointed by the President. The subject for the essays to be handed
in on May 1, 1908 is "The Oratory of the American Revolution";
1909, "Foreign Influences on Longfellow's Poetry."
No Award in 1907
Loubat Prizes
Mr. Joseph F. Loubat has endowed two prizes of $1000 and $400,
respectively, for the best works published in the English language
upon the history, geography, archaeology, ethnology, philology, or
numismatics of North America. The next award will be made in 1908.
Competition is open, under the deed of gift, to all persons, whether
connected with Columbia University or not, and whether citizens of
the United States or of any other country. No treatise shall be
eligible for the purposes of the competition except such as relate to the
topics involving antiquarian research, or that refer to events prior to
1776. In order to insure consideration of their works, authors are
invited to send copies to the President of Columbia University not
later than April 1 of the year in which the prize is to be awarded; but
the competition will not be restricted to works thus submitted. For
names of the Committee of Award for 1908. and for further details,
address the Secretary of the University.
Award of 1893: First Prize, Henry Adams, for his "History of the
United States of America during the Administrations of Jefferson
and Madison. "
Second Prize, A. F. Bandelier, for his " Report of Investigations
among the Indians of the Southwestern States. "
Award of 1898: First Prize, William Henry Holmes, for his work
entitled "Stone Implements of the Potomac — Chesapeake
Tidewater Province. "
Second Prize, Franz Boaz, Ph.D., for his monograph entitled
"The Social Organization and the Secret Societies of the Kwakiutl
Indians. "
In 190 j, no award
Grant Squires Prize
The Grant Squires Prize, the income for five years of a fund of
398 MEDALS AND PRIZES
$1000, established by Grant Squires, A.B. '85, LL.B. '87, is awarded
at the close of every quinquennial period, to such graduate conducting
an original investigation of a sociological character as shall be adjudged
most worthy by a Committee of Award, consisting of the President,
the Professor of Sociology, and one of the professors of Political
Economy, appointed by the Faculty of Political Science. The next
award will be in 1 9 1 o. Such award shall be deemed to be a recognition
of scientific ability and achievement, as well as an encouragement of
research
Award of IQ05
Edward W. Capen
Toppan Prize
A prize known as the Robert Noxon Toppan Prize, the income of an
endowment of $4000, in memory of Robert Noxon Toppan. LL.B. '61,
is awarded annually to the member of the School of Law or of Political
Science who shall pass the best written examination upon a paper
prepared by the Professor of Constitutional Law.
Award of 1907
Alfred Williams Haywood, Jr.
Prizes of the Dante Society
The Dante Society of Cambridge, Mass., offers an annual prize of
$100 for an essay on a subject drawn from the life or works of Dante.
This prize is open to competition by students of Columbia University
and by graduates of not more than three years' standing. For par-
ticulars, see the announcement of the Division of Modern Languages.
Prizes of the New Jersey Alumni Association
Two prizes of $50 each are awarded annually by the New Jersey
Alumni Association to the New Jersey students who pass the best
entrance examinations to Columbia College and the Schools of Applied
Science, respectively; with the proviso that before the award these
students shall complete satisfactorily one half-year of academic work.
Awards of 1907
Columbia College — Geddes Smith, 19 10
Schools of Applied Science — Malcolm David Malcolmson, 1910
Scholarships and Prizes in Columbia College
Seventy-two scholarships, of the annual value of $150 each, are
open for competition in Columbia College. All scholarships are in-
tended to be academic honors. Award is made, with the exception of
the scholarships depending upon entrance examinations, by the Com-
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES 399
mittee on Scholarships. Unless otherwise indicated, application for
award for each year of incumbency must be made on or before May
1, on blanks furnished by the Secretary of the University. Awards
will be announced not later than July 1.
No student who has incurred serious academic censure, or who
obtains leave of absence for the year of appointment, will be consid-
ered for reappointment. Failure to maintain a grade of at least C in
all courses taken may, and in the case of competitive scholars will,
vacate the scholarships. Vacancies may be filled at the discretion
of the Committee. Payment of one or both instalments of the stipend
may be withheld if the student proves undeserving.
The stipend of the scholarship is sufficient to pay the tuition fees of
a student electing not more than 15 points in Columbia College.
Students permitted by the Dean to take more than 15 points or to
elect professional courses must pay the difference between the amount
of the scholarship and the charge fixed by the statutes for the courses
elected.
Section I — Competitive Scholarships awarded, not later than July 15
in the order given, by the Committee on Admissions to those quali-
fied Freshmen who pass in June the best entrance examinations in
subjects aggregating the fifteen points requisite for admission. The
examination may be taken at any point in Greater New York
where examinations are held by the College Entrance Examination
Board. No applications are required from candidates for first ap-
pointment. Reappointments are made under the general regulations
of the Committee on Scholarships.
Alumni Competitive Scholarships 4
Founded by the Trustees in 1890, one awarded annually.
For 1907-08:
Class of 1909 — Herbert Calvin Skinner
Class of 191 1 — Louis Grossbaum
Hewitt and Harper Scholarships (2 each) 4
Endowed by the gift of Abram S. Hewitt, LL.D., of the
Class of 1842, and by the bequest of Joseph W. Harper,
A.M., of the Class of 1848. One open annually for com-
petition to graduates of New York City high-schools.
For 1907-08:
Harper, Class of 1908 — Clement S. Brainin
Hewitt, Class of 1909 — Francis Salzano
Harper, Class of 1910 — Arthur Yokel
Hewitt, Class of 191 1 — Herman Joseph Muller
400 SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES
Brooklyn Scholarships 12 — 20
Founded by the Trustees in 1895, in recognition of ex-
President Low's gift of a memorial building for the Univer-
sity Library. Three are open for competition annually to
residents of Brooklyn trained either in the public or the
private schools of that borough.
For 1907-08:
Class of 1908 — Louis Jacob Wolff
Ira Skutch
Class of 1909 — Charles Rivers Carrol
Gerard Alston Reichling
Class of 1910 — Carl Fritz Huttlinger
Mortimer Brenner
Paul William Aschner
Class of 191 1 — Frederick Thomas Bowers
Irvin Reed Downs
Abraham Maurice Amdursky
McClymonds Scholarship
The Louis K. McClymonds Scholarship of the annual value of $650,
maintained by Mrs. Annie K. McClymonds in memory of her late
husband, is open to that candidate for the degree of B.A. or B.S. who
shall have satisfactorily completed the requirements for admission,
and who in the judgment of the Faculty of the College shall be deemed
most deserving of appointment. Other things being equal, preference
shall be given to sons of American-born parents who have no other
means of providing for their tuition and living expenses during the
academic year.
For 1907-1908
James Handforth Mackintosh
Section II — General Scholarships awarded to applicants
whose record for ability and scholarship obtained either before
or after matriculation gives evidence of special fitness for the
course of study which they wish to pursue. Candidates in their
first year of residence at Columbia University must be strongly
recommended by the college or school from which they have
come, and have shown marked proficiency or promise in college
work. Students not in need of financial aid cannot be consid-
ered as applicants, nor can those who through physical, mental,
or moral weakness give little promise of future usefulness.
A. Open to members of any class:
Faculty Scholarships established by the Trustees 6
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES 401
Beck Scholarship 1
Established in recognition of the liberality of Charles Bath-
gate Beck, A.B. 1S77, LL.B. 1879.
Campbell Scholarships 2
In memory of Robert B. Campbell, 1844, and Henry P.
Campbell, 1S47, established by Miss Maria L. Campbell and
Miss Catharine B. Campbell.
Class of 1S48 Scholarships 2
Established through the liberality of a member of the Class
of 1848.
Scholarships of the Society for Promoting Religion and Learn-
ing Scholarships 8-19
Founded and awarded by this Society.
B. Open only to Freshmen. The requirements for admission
must be completed before matriculation. For award after en-
trance, applications should be filed not later than October 4, 1907,
or February 13, 1908. In general awards will not be made later
than December 1, or March 1, respectively.
Schermerhorn Scholarships 5
Endowed by John Jones Schermerhorn A.B. 1825.
Moffat Scholarships 2
Endowed by William B. Moffat, A.B. 1838; M.D. 1842.
Stuart Scholarships 2
Endowed in memory of Sidney Barculo Stuart, A.B. 1880;
LL.B. 1882; and Eugene Talman Stuart, A.B. 1881, Ph.B.
1882, LL.B. 1883, by their grandmother, Cornelia A. Atwill.
Alumni Association Scholarships 4 — 13
Established by the Trustees in recognition of the interest
that the Alumni Association has always shown in the affairs
of the College.
C. For award to students not less than one year in residence :
Benefactors Scholarships. Morgan (5), Vanderbilt (5), A. A. Low
(3), Cutting (2), Clark (2), Sloan (1), Parish (1), Schiff (1) —20
Established by the Trustees in 1899 in recognition of the
liberal gifts for the purchase of the site on Morningside
Heights received from J. Pierpont Morgan, Cornelius Van-
derbilt, A. A. Low, R. Fulton Cutting, Alfred Corning
Clark, Samuel Sloan, Henry Parish, Jacob H. Schiff, and
others, designated collectively as "Benefactors Scholar-
ships," of which twenty have been assigned to the College. 72
Prize of the Alumni Association
A prize of fifty dollars in money or its equivalent "to the most
faithful and deserving student of the graduating class" was estab-
402 SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES
lished in 1858 by the Association of the Alumni of Columbia College.
The graduating class selects the incumbent from three names sub-
mitted to it by the Faculty; or if, ten days prior to Commencement,
the class should notify the President of the University of its failure to
make a selection, the award may be made by the Faculty.
Names Submitted in igoy:
Harry Drew Egbert (selected by Class for prize)
Robert Henry Haskell
William Grant Palmer
Chanler Historical Prize
By the bequest of J. Winthrop Chanler, A.B. '47, the income of
$1000 is awarded annually, on Commencement Day, to the member
of the graduating class of Columbia College who, in the judgment of
the Faculty, shall be the author of the best original manuscript essay
on the history of civil government in America, or some other histor-
ical subject, the subject for 1908 being " Daniel Webster and the
Slavery Question."
No Award in igoy
Curtis Medals
An endowment fund of $1000 has been established by an associate
of the late George William Curtis in the work of Civil Service Reform,
for the award of two medals of gold and silver for excellence in public
delivery of English orations to students in Columbia College. Com-
petitors must be either third- or fourth-year students in regular stand-
ing, or in exceptional cases, and with permission of the Dean, special
students taking corresponding courses amounting to not less than 12
hours a week. The Department of English publishes about November 1
a list of subjects for the competition. Subjects not on the list may
be chosen with the consent of the department provided that application
be made not later than December 1 . The contestants will be selected
by the department at a preliminary competition which will not be
open to the public. The final public competition will be held not
less than two weeks later. The award will be made by judges ap-
pointed by the President.
Award of igoj
Gold Medal — Fremont Amasa Higgins, 1908
Silver Medal — -Bernard Abraham Rosenblatt, 1907
General Theological Seminary Prizes
Regulations as to the Seminary prizes adopted by the Protestant
Episcopal Society for Promoting Religion and Learning in the State
of New York, at a stated meeting held on April 25, 1900:
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES 403
Notice shall be given every year of the conditions of the prizes
under the old regulations (see Announcement of the College for 1900-
01, page 72), and applications invited. Wherever the conditions of
the preceding competition show that one or both of the prizes have
not been taken for lack of applicants, notice shall at the same time be
given of the competition for the prize or prizes thus open under the
new regulations set forth each year in the Announcement of Columbia
College.
The Society's Greek Seminary Prize amounts to $30 and the So-
ciety's English Prize to $20.
Award of ipoy
Greek — Bernard Campbell, 1907
English — No award
John Dash Van Buren, Jr., Prize in Mathematics
A prize known as the John Dash Van Buren, Jr., Prize in Mathematics
was established by Mrs. Louis T. Hoyt in memory of her nephew,
John Dash Van Buren, Jr., a member of the Class of 1905. The annual
income of $5000 is awarded to the candidate for an academic degree
who passes the best examination in analytical geometry, differential
and integral calculus, and in such additional subjects as the Depart-
ment of Mathematics may prescribe.
Award of 1907
Henry Blumberg
Undergraduate Prizes in Belles -Lettres
Three prizes aggregating $150, are offered annually by J. E.
Spingarn of the Class of 1895, for encouraging the study of belles-lettres
among the students of Columbia College. A prize of $60 is offered
for the best poem, $50 for the best critical essay on a work or works
of the imagination, and $40 for the best short story, to be submitted
on or before February 1 of each year. Further information may be
obtained from the Secretary of the University.
Award of 1907
For the best poem: Rhys Carpenter
Honorable mention: A. Joyce Kilmer and C. S. Wupperman
For the best critical essay :\ ?HYS Carpenter ) prize divided
^ I Leon Fraser )
For tlie best short story: Fred Jackson i
Honorable mention: Matthew Goldman and G. W. Cronyn
404
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES
Award of Honors, Columbia College, 1907
(See page 179)
Departmental Honors
Chemistry Michael Heidelberger, Second Year
Frederick William Zons, Final
English Edwin H. Woarms, Third Year
Highest Final General Honors Harry Blumberg
Isaac Maurice Wormser
General Honors
Class of 1907
Class of 1909
Henry Bierman Albert Louis Baum
Henry Blumberg William G. Cane
Lester Harrisson George Brokaw Compton
Frederick Adolph Herman Leuchs John Leonard Kantor
William Grant Palmer Gaillard Sherburne Rogers
Edwin Hess Woarms Francis Salzano
Frederick William Zons
Class of 1908
George Jardine Bagley
Clement S. Brainin
Barnard Sawyer Bronson
Irving Comes Demarest
Alfred Herrmann
Fremont Amasa Higgins
Alexander Holtzoff
wlnfred scribner mabee
Fred Hamilton Rindge, Jr.
Walter Bligh Woodbury
Class of 19 10
Mortimer Brenner
Arthur Gunther
John Dotha Jones
Paul Louis Rapp
Rollo L. de Wilton
Scholarships and Prizes in the School of Law
Twenty-one scholarships of the annual value of $150 each are
available annually for award to candidates for the degree of Bachelor
of Laws standing in need of pecuniary aid and whose record for ability
and scholarship gives evidence of special fitness for the work of the
school.
The scholarships will be awarded by the Faculty at its meeting in
June, immediately preceding Commencement. Scholarships not allot-
ted at the June meeting, or becoming vacant, may be filled by the
Faculty at its discretion. The awards will be made public not later
than July 1.
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES 405
Benefactors Scholarships. — Eight Morgan and eight Vanderbilt
Scholarships, known as Benefactors Scholarships, may be awarded to
students who have been in the school for at least one year.
Faculty Scholarships. — Four Faculty Scholarships of the annual
value of $150 each may be awarded to members of any class.
Beck Prize Scholarships. — The Charles Bathgate Beck Prize Scholar-
ship is awarded to first-year candidates who shall pass the best
examination in the subjects relating to Real-Estate Law. The
holder shall, provided he remains a member of the school, receive one
year's income of the prize fund established by the will of Charles Bath-
gate Beck in equal semi-annual instalments, during the two years fol-
lowing the award. If two or more students pass examinations of
equal merit, the income of the fund may be divided.
Awards of Bech Scholarship
1900-1901 Charles R. Gauter 1904-1905 John M. Griffith
1901-1902 Henry Starr Giddings 1905-1906 Charles B. Shelton
1902-1903 H. H. Babcock 1906-1907 Robert Leroy
E. P. Grosvenor 1907-1908 Charles M. Travis
1903-1904 E. L. Beatty
Fellowships, Scholarships, and Prizes in the College of
Physicians and Surgeons
Alumni Association Fellowships
Provision is made annually by the Alumni Association of the College
of Physicians and Surgeons for three fellowships, tenable for one year
and of an annual value of $500, open to graduates who have shown
special aptitude for scientific research in the Departments of Anatomy,
Physiology, and Pathology. Appointments are made by the Execu-
tive Committee of the Alumni Association from candidates presented
by the professors of Anatomy, Physiology, and Pathology.
Incumbents are expected to devote themselves to scientific research
in the department which they may elect, either at Columbia Univer-
sity, where they enjoy free tuition and the privileges of the laboratories
or in other institutions either here or abroad, at their own expense, and
at the end of the year's work to present to the Association a thesis
containing evidence of independent or original work in their special
department.
For 1907-08:
In Pathology — Wilbur Ward
In Anatomy — Hermann von Wechlinger Schulte
406 SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES
Proudfit Fellowship in Medicine
The Maria McLean Proudfit Fellowship, endowed by the late
Alexander Moncrief Proudfit, A.B. '92, for the encouragement of ad-
vanced studies in medicine, is open to any son of native-born American
parents, a graduate in medicine, who shall pursue advanced studies in
internal medicine under the direction of the Medical Faculty of the
University, and who shall, while enjoying such fellowship, remain un-
married, and shall be appointed by the University Council upon the
recommendation of the Faculty of Medicine. Appointment shall be
made every four years, upon terms to be designated by the Faculty.
The Fellow shall carry on his studies under the direction of the
Faculty of Medicine.
Proudfit Fellow in Medicine :
1904-08 Linsly Rudd Williams
Alonzo Clark Scholarship
By the will of the late Alonzo Clark, M.D., LL.D., for many years
President of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and Professor of
Pathology and Practical Medicine, it has been placed in the power of
the Faculty to bestow a scholarship, with an income of about $700 a
year, for the purpose of promoting the discovery of new facts in medical
science.
Award of IQ07-08 :
Augustus B. Wadsworth
Prizes
The following prizes are awarded for the best medical essay sub-
mitted under the conditions named in the statement of each prize, and,
in addition, under the following general regulations:
Each essay must be marked with a device or motto, and accompanied
by a sealed envelope similarly marked and containing the name and
address of the author, and a written statement that the essay contains
the result of original investigation made by him, that it is not the work
of more than one author, and that it has not at the same time been sub-
mitted for any other prize. If in any case no essay is received that is
deemed sufficiently meritorious, the prize will not be awarded.
Alumni Association Prize
The Alumni Association Prize of S500 is awarded biennially (next
award, 1908) to an alumnus of the College of Physicians and Surgeons
for the best medical essay submitted upon any subject that the writer
may select. Essays should be sent to the Secretary of the Alumni
Association of the College of Physicians and Surgeons on or before
April 1 of the year of award. Next award Commencement 1908.
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES 407
Cartwright Prize of the Alumni Association
The Cartwright Prize of $500 was endowed by a bequest of Si 0,000
left by Benjamin Cartwright, and is offered for competition in alter-
nate years with the Alumni Association Prize.
It is awarded on the same terms as the latter, except that it is open
to universal competition.
Award of 190J
R. M. Yerkes
Joseph Mather Smith Prize
The fund for this prize was given by the relatives, friends, and
pupils of the late Dr. Smith, as a memorial of his services as Professor
in the College of Physicians and Surgeons from 1826 to 1866. Under
the provisions of the trust an annual prize of $100 is awarded for the
best essay on the subject of the year, presented by an alumnus of
the College. The competing essays should be sent to the Dean of the
College of Physicians and Surgeons on or before March 10.
No Award in igoj
Stevens Triennial Prize
The Stevens Triennial Prize, value $200, established by the late
Alexander Hodgdon Stevens, M.D., formerly President of the College
of Physicians and Surgeons, is open for universal competition.
The Dean of the Medical Faculty, the President of the Alumni Asso-
ciation of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and the Professor
of Physiology, are, ex-officio, the administrators of the prize. Essays
must be in the hands of the first-named on or before January r, 1909.
Scholarships
Open to Candidates for the Degree of M.D.
The award of these scholarships is made only to students whose
record for ability and scholarship gives evidence of special fitness and
who need pecuniary aid to obtain an education. Scholarships are
available annually and tenable for one year with an annual value of
$250 each.
Harsen Scholarships
The income of a fund established by the late Jacob Harsen. M.D.
in 1859, for the purpose of "promoting the study of Medical and
Surgical Practice," has, under an order of the Supreme Court, been
made available for the award of five scholarships to students in the
College of Physicians and Surgeons, in lieu of the Harsen prizes hereto-
fore awarded. Of these scholarships, which are known as the "Harsen
Scholarships," two may be awarded to students taking the second
408 SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES
year in the medical course; two to students in their third year; and
one to students in their fourth year, provided that the aggregate of
the stipends of such scholarships shall not exceed the income earned
by the fund during the preceding year.
Faculty Scholarships
These are four in number and may be awarded to members of any
class.
Vanderbilt Scholarships
In recognition of the liberal gifts of William H. Vanderbilt to the
College of Physicians and Surgeons, four scholarships, to be known as
the "William H. Vanderbilt Scholarships," have been established.
These are open to students of any class.
Scholarships and Prizes in the Schools of Mines, Chemistry,
and Engineering
Thirty-five scholarships of the annual value of $250 each are avail-
able annually for award to meritorious candidates for professional
degrees in Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry, who are in good aca-
demic standing, and in need of pecuniary aid.
The awards will be made not later than July 1 by the Committee
on Scholarships. Scholarships not allotted at this time, or becoming
vacant, shall be filled by the Committee at its discretion.
In recognition of the liberal gifts for the purchase of the site on
Morningside Heights which have been received from J. Pierpont
Morgan, Cornelius Vanderbilt, D. Willis James, Morris K. Jesup,
Samuel D. Babcock, Oswald Ottendorfer, and others, the Trus-
tees have established a number of scholarships, twenty-seven of which
are open to students in the Schools under the Faculty of Applied
Science, as follows: seven Morgan, seven Vanderbilt, ten James, one
Jesup, one Babcock, and one Ottendorfer. These scholarships may
be awarded to students who have been in the University for at least
one year.
In addition to the above, eight Faculty scholarships may be awarded
to members of any class.
Marcus Daly Scholarship in Mining Engineering
The Marcus Daly Scholarship of the annual value of $1000, main-
tained by Mrs. James W. Gerard in memory of her father, is open to
that worker or descendant of a worker in the Montana mines who
passes the best competitive entrance examinations to the course in
mining engineering. The winner of the scholarship shall hold the
same throughout his course in mining engineering, subject to the same
conditions of reappointment as those imposed upon the holders of
competitive scholarships in Columbia College. As soon as the term
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES 409
of one holder of the scholarship is about to expire, another competi-
tive examination is held.
Scholar for IQ05-0S:
Henry Farmer Davis
Illig Medals
A bequest of $2000 left by William C. Illig, E.M. '82, provides for
the annual award of medals at Commencement to the student or
students in the graduating class of the Schools of Mines, Engineering,
and Chemistry, who shall, in the judgment of the Faculty, have
merited the same by commendable proficiency in their regular studies.
Award of igoy:
Arthur Isador Dehuff
Stanley Frank Bond
Victor R. Greiff
Darling Prize
The Edward A. Darling Prize in Mechanical Engineering, the income
of $1000, bequeathed by Edward A. Darling, formerly Superintendent
of Buildings and Grounds, shall be awarded annually to the most
faithful and deserving student of the graduating class in mechanical
engineering, the recipient of the prize to be chosen by ballot by mem-
bers of the graduating class in the Course in Mechanical Engineering
from among three names to be chosen by the Faculty of Applied
Science.
Award of igoj:
Mario Gerolamo Carbone
Scholarships and Fellowships in the School of Architecture
Columbia Fellowship
The Columbia Fellowship in Architecture, the net income of $13,000,
established in recognition of the gifts of F. Augustus Schermerhorn,
E.M. '68, to the Department of Architecture, is open each year to
graduates of the three preceding years, and is awarded in June as the
result of a competition in design. The winner is required to spend a
year in the School as a graduate student in Design. The value of this
Fellowship in 1907 is $536.
Columbia Fellows in Architecture. (Note — Until 1905 this was a
travelling fellowship awarded biennially) :
1890-91 Arthur A. Stoughton 1900-01 Theodore Blondel, Jr.
1892-93 Horace B. Mann 1902-03 Arthur Warb
1894-95 Seth Justin Temple 1904-05 Hubert Van Wagenen, Jr.
1896-97 William Kinne Fellows 1905-06 Thomas William Ludlow
1898-99 William Clark Ayres 1906-07 Emilio Levy
410 SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES
McKim Fellowships
The McKim Fellowship in Architecture, endowed by gift of Charles
F. McKim of $20,000, is open to graduates who have received their
degrees within six years preceding its bestowal, and is awarded in
May of each year as the result of a competition in design. The holder
is required to spend a year in foreign travel and study. Any incum-
bent who has displayed marked proficiency and promise is eligible to
reappointment for one year, but no more. The value of this Fellow-
ship is $820.
McKim Fellows in Architecture :
1891-92 A. C. M. DEL MONTE
Alexander M. Welch
1893-95 George Oakley Totten, Jr.
William Lincoln Thorne
1895-97 John Russell Pope
1897-98 Harry Allan Jacobs
1898-99 John Russell Pope
Harry Allan Jacobs
1899-1901 Livingston Pell
William Edward Parsons
1901-02 Charles Ludwig Otto
Edward Necarsulmer
1903-04 Francis Augustus Nelson
George Washington Jacobt
1904-05 No incumbent
1905-07 Lucien Easter Smith
1907-08 William Lawrence Bottomley
Perkins Fellowship
A travelling fellowship, the net income from a fund of $5700, from
the bequest of the late Willard P. Perkins, is awarded every fourth
year, the next award being in 19 10. The conditions of award and
the purposes of the fellowship are the same as for the McKim Fel-
lowships.
Perkins Fellows:
1902-03 Charles Sumner Kaiser
1906-07 Arthur Lobo
Scholarships
Four scholarships of the value of $200 are awarded in the School of
Fine Arts, under the same general conditions as those in the Schools of
Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry.
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES
411
Barnard College
Honors
Honors are of two kinds, departmental and general honors. The
regulations governing their award are the same as those for the cor-
responding "Honors in Columbia College" (see page 179).
Departmental — English Gertrude Louise Cannon, Final
Helen Carter, Final
Annie Laurie Manley, Final
Charlotte Rose Oesterlein, Final
Geology Mary Elizabeth Lord, Final
Frances May Ingalls, Second Year
German Amalie Lowenthal, Final
Elsie Schachtel, Final
Greek Elizabeth Nitchie, First Year
Josephine Ray West, First Year
Latin Ethel Grace Everett, Third Year
Agnes Teresa O'Donnell, First Year
Margaret Mary Alacoque O'Don-
nell, First Year
Mathematics Edna Major Wilkes, Final
Mabel Louise Peterson, Third Year
Louise May Tattershall, Third Year
Edna Rebecca Scales, Second Year
Harriet Ruth Fox, First Year
Zoology Fannie Moulton McLane, Final
General — Highest Final General Honors
Gertrude Louise Cannon
Charlotte Rose Oesterlein
Juliet Stuart Points
Class of 1 go j
Amalie Louise Althaus
Helen Carter
Florence Gordon
Lillian Wellin
Marguerite Baer Israel
Mary Elizabeth Lord
Amalie Lowenthal
Elsie Schachtel
Class of iqo8
Clara Cecilia Eaton Edith Cushing Richardson
Helen Babbette Loeb Helen Ida Veith
Evelyn Blunt Macdonald Jennie Marie Young
Mabel Louise Peterson
Class of igog
Alice Catharine Grant
412 SCHOLASRHIPS AND PRIZES
Class of igio
Harriet Ruth Fox Dorothy Browning Kirchwey
Elizabeth Nitchie
Scholarships
There are altogether forty-one scholarships and three special funds
for the aid of needy and deserving students.
For a detailed statement of the values of the various scholarships,
the conditions under which they are awarded, the regulations regarding
applications, and the like, the Announcement of Barnard College
should be consulted. This may be obtained without charge upon
application to the Secretary of Barnard College.
The following is a summary of the scholarships:
Competitive
(Awarded for excellence in entrance examinations)
i. Open to all Students:
Trustees' Competitive Scholarship1 i
Jessie Kaufmann Scholarship i
2. Open to Particular Students:
Brooklyn Scholarships 12
Jeannette Amelia Steinecke
Margaret Tower Hart
Rose L. Salmowitz
Lucille Pulitzer Scholarships 3
Non-competitive
(Awarded on the nomination of the Committee on Scholarships
of the Faculty to worthy students who have passed at least one year
in College)
1. Open to all Students:
Student Scholarships 12
Ella Weed Scholarship
Veltin School Scholarship
Jennie B. Clarkson Scholarship
Emily James Smith Scholarship
Anna E. Barnard Scholarship
Brearley School Scholarship
Eliza Taylor Chisholm Memorial Scholarship
'The Trustees' Competitive Scholarship was won by Jeannette Amelia Steinecke,
who also won a Brooklyn Scholarship and chose to retain the latter rather than the
Trustees' Scholarship. The Trustees' Competitive Scholarship was, therefore, not
awarded in 1907-1908.
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES 413
Graham School Scholarship 1
Keller School Scholarship 1
2. Open to Particular Students:
Mrs. Donald McLean Scholarship 1
Emma Hertzog Scholarship 1
Mrs. Henry Clarke Coe Scholarship 1
3. Special Funds for the Aid of Needy and Deserving Students:
Arthur Brooks Fund, income of $5000
Fiske Scholarship Fund, income of $5000
George W. Smith Scholarship Fund, income of $5000
Prizes
Kohn Mathematical Prize of $50
Edna Major Wilkes
Herrman Botanical Prize of $50
Mary Elizabeth Lord
Detailed statements about the conditions governing the award of
prizes will be found in the current edition of the Barnard College
Announcement, which can be obtained without charge of the Secretary
of Barnard College.
Teachers College
Fellowships in Education
Teachers College awards annually four or more fellowships and eight
or more graduate scholarships.
Fellows for ipoy-ipoS
Travelling Fellowship
Mary Davis Swartz
Honorary Fellowship
Bailey Barton Burritt
Fellowships in Education
Clarence Hall Robison
Cliff Winfield Stone
Research Scholarships
Emmett E. Giltner Franklin Clark McGill
George Leroy Jackson Benjamin Roy Simpson
Edwin Reagan Snyder
414 SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES
Graduate Scholarships
Thomas Agnew, Jr. Lawrence Benjamin Hill
Isurn Arai Charles Simpson Meek
William Carl Robertson Anderson Alfred Ernst Rejall
Harry Erwin Bard Samuel Henry Thompson
Harvey P. Dole Guy Fred Wells
Louise Phillips Glanton
Under -graduate Scholarships
Tileston Scholarship
Fred Thorne
Shackleford Scholarship
Albert Ford
Pierrepont Scholarship
Adele May Jones
Pond Scholarship
Marie Louise Pinckney
Charlotte Louisa Williams Scholarships
Jane Herbert Nicholson Mary Cornelia Rainey
Earl Scholarships
Leo Freedman John Nathan Lobdell
Hoadley Scholarships
Lota Lee Troy Ida Miller Howard
Army and Navy Scholarship
Bess Adelaide Capron
Brown Scholarship
Edwin Henry Lee
Macy Scholarships
Anna Augusta Dunbar Ira Richardson
Darius Eatman Isabell Olive Shoemaker
Lewis Sprague Mills Lois Wise Witcher
Edgar A. Morgan
Jenkins Scholarships
Christine Holmes Boyson Mary Blanche Reindollar
Helen Frishe Edith Grace Rice
Ada Mary Catherine Hartzell Helen Ford Staples
Anna Gibb Hayes Arthur Elliott Suffern
John Adams Kingsbury Emilie Townsend
Mary Reesor
SCHOLARSHIPS AND PRIZES 415
Prize of the Daughters of tlie Confederacy
Herbert Thomas Coleman
College of Pharmacy
Prizes
Max J Breitenbach Prize
A cash prize of $200 is presented annually by Mr. Max J. Breiten-
bach for the highest proficiency in the Senior University Course.
Award in igoy -08.
Roscoe Miller Annis
Kappa Psi Prize
Charles William Ballard
UNIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY
For the Academic Year Ending July i, 1907
I. Official Publications of Columbia University
Unless otherwise stated, all the publications named below are
distributed without charge upon application to the Secretary of
Columbia University.
Annual Catalogue: See Table of Contents, pages iii-ix. Issued
each December. Price 25 cents.
Annual Reports of the President and the Treasurer to the Trustees:
issued each November.
Directory of Officers and Students: issued each year soon after the
opening of the University; contains the names, office hours, and ad-
dresses of the officers of the University, and the names and addresses
of the students registered up to the time of publication.
General Catalogue of the Alumni: issued sextennially; contains the
names and addresses of all graduates of the University. The current
edition is that of 1906. Price, $2.00. For sale at the University Press
Bookstore and in the office of the Registrar.
Announcements of the various parts of the work of the University
are issued in the spring of each year and contain detailed information
concerning admission, expenses, courses of instruction to be given
during the coming year, and requirements for degrees. They
include :
Columbia College, for the work in Civil, Electrical and Mechanical
for men leading to the degree Engineering.
of Bachelor of Arts. Faculties of Political Science,
School of Law, for the work Philosophy, and Pure Science,
leading to the degree of Bachelor for all non-professional advanced
of Laws. work leading to the degrees of
College of Physicians and Sur- Master of Arts and Doctor of
geons, for the work leading to Philosophy,
the degree of Doctor of Medicine. Faculty of Fine Arts, including
Schools of Mines, Engineering, courses given in the School of
and Chemistry, courses in Mining Architecture, the School of Music,
and Metallurgy, in Chemistry, and the School of Design, and in
416
PUBLICATIONS
417
the Departments of Fine Arts
and Music in Teachers College,
and courses in allied subjects.
Yale -Columbia Courses in For-
eign Service.
Extension Teaching, Residence
Halls, Summer Session.
Summer Courses in Medicine.
Circular of Information as to
Entrance Examinations and Ad-
mission.
Circular of General Informa-
tion, with views of the University
buildings.
Student Organizations, Athletic
and Other, under the supervision
of the Comptroller of Student
Organizations.
Announcements of the several
divisions of the University are
issued in the spring, and contain
full information concerning the
work of the coming year, or years,
in those divisions. These circu-
lars are devoted to Biology;
Classical Philology; Geology, Ge-
ography, and Mineralogy; His-
tory, Economics, and Public Law;
Mathematical and Physical Sci-
ence; Modern Languages and
Literatures; Physical Education;
Oriental Languages; Philosophy,
Psychology, and Anthropology.
Publications of Barnard College:
Announcement of Barnard Col-
lege: contains full information
concerning admission, expenses,
courses of instruction, and re-
quirements for the degree of
Bachelor of Arts.
Report of the Dean: issued
yearly.
These publications are distri-
buted without charge upon appli-
cation to the Secretary of Barnard
College.
Publications of Teachers College :
Announcement of Teachers Col-
lege: issued annually; contains
full information concerning the or-
ganization, equipment, and work
of this institution, the Depart-
ment of Education of Columbia
University.
Report of the Dean: issued each
November.
Special Circulars describing the
work of the departments of:
Educational Psychology, His-
tory and Philosophy of Educa-
tion, Educational Administration,
Secondary Education, Elementary
Education, Physical Education,
Kindergarten, Domestic Art, Do-
mestic Science, Fine Arts, Manual
Training, Music, and of other
departments.
These may be obtained without
charge upon application to the
Secretary of Teachers College.
Special Announcement of Ex-
tension Teaching, and Syllabi of
Extension Courses, a list of which
may be had by addressing the
Director of Extension Teaching,
Teachers College.
Circular of the Horace Mann
School; a school fully equipped
with kindergarten, elementary,
418 UNIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY
and secondary classes, maintained without charge upon application
by Teachers College as a school to the Superintendent of the
of observation. Horace Mann School.
This circular may be obtained
Publications of the College of Pharmacy:
Announcement of the College ing the organization, equipment
of Pharmacy, issued annually; and work of this institution,
contains full information concern-
II. The Columbia Universit}' Press
The Columbia University Press was organized with the approval of
the Trustees of Columbia College and was incorporated June 8, 1893,
for the purpose of promoting the publication of works embodying the
results of original research. The Press is a private corporation, related
directly to Columbia University by the provisions that its Trustees
must always be officers of the University, and that the President of
the University shall be the President of the Press.
Trustees
The President of the University (ex-ofjicio)
William H. Carpenter, Secretary
John B. Pine, Treasurer
Professors Matthews, G. R. Carpenter, Giddings, Osborn, Peck
Howe, and Lee.
During the year ending July r, 1907, the Press, through the Mac-
millan Co., of New York and London, its publishing agents, issued:
Cadwallader Colden : A representative Eighteenth-century official. By
Alice Mapelsden Keys. 1906. 14 + 375 p. The glacial history
of Nantucket and Cape Cod, with an argument for a fourth centre of
glacial dispersion in North America. By J. Howard Wilson.' 1906.
xo + 90 p. 36 pi. ; and issued numbers of the following:1
Biological Series; Geological Series; Lectures upon the George Blu-
menthal Foundation; Germanic Studies; Indo-Iranian Series; Oriental
Studies; Studies in classical Philology; Columbia University Quarterly,
and Teachers College Record.
III. Publications, Contributions, and Serial Studies from the
University 2 with Date of Foundation
Unless otherwise indicated these are published by the editor from Columbia Uni-
1 For previous issues from the Press see the University Catalogue for 1899-1900, pages
398-399: 1900-1901, pages 4SS-4S6; 1901-1902. pages 439-441; 1902-1903, pages
445-449; 1903-1904, pages 439-443; 1904-1905. pages 465-470; 1905-1906, pages 440-
444; 1906-1907, pages 384-387; and the full catalogue issued by The Macmillan Co.
2 For purposes of record and information, it is the aim to publish each year a com-
plete list of the numbers issued in each of these series during the preceding academic
year. If no list appears under a given heading, it may be assumed that no numbers
were issued.
PUBLICATIONS 419
versity; the Press publications through the Macmillan Co. When prices are not
given they may be had on application.
Biological Series. — 1892; managing editors, H. F. Osborn and E. B.
Wilson; Columbia University Press, about one volume a year
per volume (from 300 to 400 pages), $2.00 to $3.50.
Vol. X. Behavior of the lower organisms. By H. S. Jennings. 1906. 144-366p.il.
Botanical Club, Memoirs of the Torrey. — 1889 ; published by the Club ;
$3.00 per volume.
Botany, Contributions from the Department of. — 1886; short papers, in
part reprints; editor, L. M. Underwood; per volume (about 330
pages, 30 plates), $5.00.
No. 229. The pedunculate species of Trillium. By Henry Allan Gleason (1906).
No. 230 The behavior of the pollen-tube in Houstonia ccerulea. By Chester
Arthur Matthewson (1906). No. 231. American Ferns — VII. By L. M. Under-
wood (1907). No. 232. Some Lactarii from Windham County, Vermont. By
Gertrude S. Burlingham (1907). No. 233. A study of the influences of Magne-
sium sulphate on the growth of seedlings. By Gertrude S. Burlingham (1907).
No. 234. American Ferns — VIII: A preliminary review of the North American Gleich-
eniacea. By L. M. Underwood (1907).
Botany, Memoirs of the Department of. — 1895; more extended mono-
graphs; editor, L. M. Underwood; $6.00 per volume; list on
application.
Chemistry, Contributions from the Havemeyer Laboratories. — 1898;
reprints of papers recording research by officers and students in
the School of Chemistry; managing editor, C. F. Chandler;
issued annually; price on application.
Vol. IX., No. 123. Researches on quinazolines (Fifteenth paper). On a 3 -aminoquin-
azoline, and the corresponding 3, 3' diquinazolyl, from 6 -nitroacetanthranil and hy-
drazine hydrate. By M. T. Bogert and H. A. Seil. No. 124. Researches on
quinazolines (Sixteenth paper). Synthesis of 6-nitro-2-methyl-4-ketodihydroquinazolines
from s -nitroacetanthranil and primary amines. By M. T. Bogert and Ellen P. Cook.
No. 125. The measurement of temperature in the formation of carborundum. By
S. A. Tucker and Alexander Lampen. No. 126. An electrical resistance furnace
for the measurement of higher temperatures with the optical pyrometer. By Alex-
ander Lampen. No. 127. Platinum silver alloys. By John F. Thompson and
Edmund H. Miller. No. 128. The insoluble chromicyanides. By F. V. D.
Cruser and Edmund H. Miller. No. 129. Seasonal variations in the composition
of cows' milk. By H. C. Sherman. No. 130. Researches on quinazolines (Seven-
teenth paper). The synthesis of quinazoline carboxylic acids from 4-aminoisophthalic
acid and from aminoterephthalic acid. By M. T. Bogert, J. D. Wiggin, and J. E.
Sinclair. No. 131. Researches on quinazolines (Eighteenth paper). On 2, 3-
dialkyl-4-quinazolines and the products obtained by alkylating 2 -alkyl -4 -quinazolines
(2-alkyl-4-hydroxy quinazolines). By M. T. Bogert and H. A. Seil. No. 132.
Researches on quinazolines (Nineteenth paper). The synthesis of 1, 3, 6, 8-naphtho-
tetrazines from p-diaminoterephthalic acid and from certain of its derivatives. By M.
T. Bogert and J. M. Nelson. No. 133. Some new double phosphates of iron
(ferric) and aluminium. By Louis J. Cohen. No. 134. The calculation of some
chemical equilibria. By K. George Falk. No. 135. Iron in food and its functions
42 o UNIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY
in nutrition. By H. C. Sherman. — No. 136. Ammonia in milk and its development
during proteolysis under the influence of strong antiseptics. By H. C. Sherman, W. N.
Berg, L. J. Cohen, and W. G. Whitman.
Classical Philology, Studies in. — 1902; results of original research in
the classical languages and literatures; edited by H. T. Peck
and E. D. Perry; Columbia University Press.
The influence of a stress accent in Latin poetry. — By Elizabeth Hickman Du Bois.
1906. 5 + 96 p.
Comparative Literature, Studies in. — 1899; results of literary research
or criticism; editors J. B. Fletcher and J. E. Spingarn; Columbia
University Press. Eight volumes have already been published,
and others are in preparation.
Education, Columbia University Contributions to. — 1905; A series of
monographs published by Teachers College, continuing the educa-
tional numbers of the Columbia University Contributions to Phi-
losophy, Psychology, and Education; consist of dissertations for
the doctor's diploma and degree and works of a similar character ;
four or five numbers per year; 100-200 p. and over.
No. 7. The public primary school system of France, with special reference to the
training of teachers. By Frederic Ernest Farrington. 1906. 303 p. Price,
$2.50, net. No. 8. The educational significance of Sixteenth-century arithmetic.
By Lambert Lincoln Jackson. 1906. 232 p. Price, S2.00, net. No. 10. The
college curriculum in the United States. By Louis Franklin Snow. 1907- 187 P-
Price, $1.50 net. No. n. The seven liberal arts; a study in medieval culture. By
Paul Abelson. 1906. 8 + 151 p. Price, 81.50, net. — — No. 12. Administration
and educational work of American juvenile reform schools. By David S. Snedden.
1907. 204 p. Price, $2. 00, net. No. 13. The concept of equality in the writings
of Rousseau, Bentham, and Kant. By J. A. T. Williams. 1907. 85 p. Price,
75c, net. No. 14. Herbart and Froebel: An attempt at synthesis. By Richard
Percival Cole. 1907. 116 p. Price, St. 00, net. No. 15. Public education in
Upper Canada (Ontario). 1791-1841. By Herbert T.J.Coleman. 1907. 120 p.
Price, Si. 00 net.
Educational Reprints, Columbia University. — 1906; published by
Teachers College.
Electrical Engineering, Contributions from the Department of. — 1889:
papers (chiefly reprints) by officers and students; managing
editor, F. B. Crocker.
English, Studies in. — 1900; issued by authority of the Department
of English; Columbia University Press.
Geological Department, Contributions from the. — 1892; include short
contributions and longer monographs; managing editor, J. F.
Kemp.
Vol. VIII, No. 60. The primary septae in rugose corals. By C. E. Gordon. No.
61. Ore deposits at the contacts of intrusive rocks and limestones. By James F. Kemp.
No. 62. Intercollegiate field courses in geology. By Thomas C. Brown.
Vol. XIII, No. 21. Cambric fossils from the Pioche Mountains, Nevada. By Fred J.
PUBLICATIONS 421
Peck. No. 122. Paleogeography of Saint Peter's time. By Charles P. Berkey.
No. 123. Sketch of the geology and ore deposits of the Cochise mining district,
Cochise County, Arizona. By L. O. Kellogg. No. 124. A microscopic examina-
tion of the cobalt and nickel arsenides and silver deposits of Temiskaming (Ont. .Canada) .
By W. Campbell and C. W. Knight. No. 125- Types of sedimentary overlap. By
Amadeus W. Grabau. No. 126. Dikes. By James Furman Kemp. No. 127.
Studies in the development of certain paleozoic corals. By G. E. Anderson. No.
128. Do the geological relations of ore deposits justify the retention of the law of the
apex ? By Charles H. Shamel. No. 1 29. Ore deposits at the contacts of intrusive
rocks and limestones; and their significance as regards the general formation of veins. By
James Furman Kemp. No. 130. Present structural character and probable
former extent of the palisade loop (New Jersey). By Alexis A. Julien. No. 131.
The geographical classification of marine life districts. By Amadeus W. Grabau.
Vol. XIV. The glacial history of Nantucket and Cape Cod. By J. Howard Wilson.
Vol. XV. Geology and paleontology of the Schoharie Valley. By Amadeus W.
Grabau.
Vol. XVII, No. 1 Development stages in Streptelasma Rectum. By Thomas C.
Brown. No. 2. The White-Knob copper deposits, Mackay, Idaho. By J. F.
Kemp and C. G. Gunther. No. 3. Report of paper presented to the New York
Academy of Sciences by A. W. Grabau, describing the geology of Letchworth Park
(Glen Iris), the new state reservation on the Genesee River, N. Y. By Alexis A.
Julien. No. 5. Structural and stratigraphic features of the basal gneisses of the
Highlands, NAY. By Charles P. Berkey. No. 6. Magmatic emanations. By
Francis Church Lincoln.
Germanic Studies. — 1899; results of original research in Germanic
languages and literatures; Editors, W. H. Carpenter and Calvin
Thomas; Columbia University Press.
Vol. III. No. 2. The nature sense in the writings of Ludwig Tieck. By George
Henry Danton. 1907. n+99 p.
History, Economics, and Public Law, Studies in. — 1891; results
of original research by students in the School of Political
Science; managing editor, E. R. A. Seligman; Columbia University
Press; one volume or more issued yearly; price per volume, $3.00
to $4.50.
Vol. XXV, No. 1. Municipal control of public utilities. By Oscar Lewis Pond.
1906. 117 p. No. 2. The budget in the American commonwealths. By Eugene
E. Agger. 1907. 219 p. No. 3. The finances of Cleveland. By Charles C.
Williamson. 1907. 266 p.
•Vol. XXVI, No. 1. Trade and currency in early Oregon. By James Henry Gilbert.
1907. 126 p. No. 2. Luther's Table Talk. By Preserved Smith. 1907. 137
p. No. 3. The tobacco industry in the United States. By Meyer Jacobstein,
1907. 208 p. No. 4. Social democracy and population. By Alvah A. Tenney.
1907. 92 P-
Vol. XXVII, No, 1. The economic policy of Robert Walpole. By Norris A.
Brisco. 1907. 222 p. No. 2. The United States Steel Corporation. By
Abraham Berglund. 1907. 179 p. No. 3. The taxation of corporations in
Massachusetts. By Harry G. Friedman. 1907. 178 p.
Vol. XXVIII, No. 1. De Witt Clinton and the origin of the spoils system in New
York. By Howard Lee McBain. 1907. 163 p.
Indo-Iranian Series. — 1900; work in the Indo-Iranian Languages;
editor, A. V. Williams Jackson; Columbia University Press.
422 UNIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY
Lectures upon the Blumenthal Foundation. — 1906; lectures on sub-
jects of practical politics, supported by the income of the George
Blumenthal Endowment Fund.
Political problems of American development. By Albert Shaw. 1907. 7 + 268 p.
Library Bulletins. — Founded in 1897 as Publications; show the re-
sources of the Library on various subjects; editor, C. Alex.
Nelson; published by the Library.
Mineralogy, Contributions from the Department of. — 1892; articles
and text-books by officers and students; managing editor, A. J.
Moses.
Vol. XIII, No. 1. Determination of the geometrical constants of a crystal from its
interfacial angles. By Alfred J. Moses, 1906.
Observatory, Contributions from the. — 1892; astronomical researches
managing editor, Harold Jacoby.
Vol. I, Nos. 1-2. The Rutherford photographic measures. No. 1. Lewis Morris
Rutherford. No. 2. Catalogue of Rutherford's photographic plates of the sun, the
moon, and the stars. By John Krom Rees. 1906. 23 p. Octavo. No. 9. The
variation of latitude at New York City. By John K. Rees, Harold Jacoby, and
Herman S. Davis. Part 2. The variation of latitude and constant of aberration,
1906. p. 1 1 1-342. Quarto. No. 24. Rutherford photographs of the stellar
clusters h and x Persei. By Anne Sewell Young. 1906. 76 p. Octavo.
Oriental Studies. — 1902; results of original research in the Oriental
languages and literatures; edited by Richard J. H. Gottheil;
Columbia University Press.
Vol. III. Old Babylonian temple records. By Robert Julius Lau. 1906. 11+89
+ 41 p. 35 pi. Vol. IV. Sidon; a study in oriental history. By Frederick Carl
Eiselen. 1907. 7 + 172 p.
Pathology, Studies from the Department of. — 1890; results of research
in the department; managing editor, T. M. Prudden; on sale
by J. T. Dougherty, New York; price per volume (about 175
p ), $1.00.
Philosophy, Archives of. — 1907; original studies by officers and stu-
dents; edited by J. E. Woodbridge; New York; The Science
Press; per number, average, 75c; per volume (about 450 pages),
average, $3.00.
Physiological Chemistry — Biochemical Researches : Collected Reprints
of Publications from the Laboratory of. — 1899; results of research
in the department; managing editor, William J. Gies; price
per volume (of 700-800 pages), $5.00.
Psychology, Archives of. — 1905; edited by R. S. Woodworth ; New
York; The Science Press; per volume (600-700 pages), S5.00.
No. 1. The psychology of mentally deficient children. By Naomi Norsworthy.
1906. 3 + 11 1 p. No. 2. On the functions of the cerebrum: The frontal lobes. By
Shepherd Ivory Franz. 1907. 64P. No. 3. Empirical studies in the theory of
JOURNALS 423
measurement. By Edward L. Thorndike. 1907. 3 + 45 P. No. 4. Rhythm as a
distinguishing characteristic of prose style. By Abram Lipsky. 1907. 3 + 44 p.
No. 5. The field of distinct vision. By William Carl Ruediger. 1907. 68 p.
Romance Philology and Literature, Studies in. — 1900; edited by
Adolphe Cohn and H. A. Todd; Columbia University Press.
University Extension Syllabi. — 1903; contain outlines of study, bibli-
ographies, and references, and furnish systematic guides for the
private student, reading circles, and classes of instruction; Series
A contains syllabi of collegiate courses; Series B contains syllabi
of shorter lecture courses; New York; Teachers College; price, 10
cents per copy.
Series A, No. 18. School administration. By Samuel T. Dutton. 1906. No.
19. Modern European history. By Charles A. Beard. 1906. No. 20. Teaching
in elementary schools. By George D. Strayer. 1906.
Series Announced
Physiology, Studies from the Department of. — 1900; reprints of
articles published by officers and students of the department;
edited by J. G. Curtis and F. S. Lee. (Three volumes in pre-
paration.)
IV. Journals
Issued under the Editorial Direction of Officers of Columbia
University
Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. — 1870; devoted to scientific
botany in its widest sense; associate editors, T. E. Hazen and
H. M. Richards; published by the Club monthly, 30c; per year
(about 650 p., with 40 plates), $3.00.
Charities. — 1897; devoted to local and general philanthropy; editor,
Edward T. Devine; Charity Organization Society; weekly, 5c;
monthly, 10c; per year (about 600 pages), $2.00.
Classical Weekly. — 1907; continuing the New York Latin Leaflet;
official organ of the Classical Association of the Middle States and
Maryland; will contain a complete bibliography of current Greek
and Latin articles and publications; Gonzalez Lodge, editor-in-
chief, assisted by an editorial board of six; weekly; per year, Si. 00.
Columbia University Quarterly. — Continuing, since 1898, the Bulletin,
founded in 1890; publishes articles on the history, the current
activities, and the policy of Columbia University, for the informa-
tion of its officers, alumni, and friends; edited by a committee
(managing editor for 1907, R. Tombo, Jr.); Columbia University
Press; quarterly (125 pages), with occasional supplements, 30c;
per year, $1.00.
Economic Geology; with which is incorporated the American Geologist.
— 1905; devoted to geology as applied to mining and allied indus-
424 UNIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY
tries; J. F.Kemp, associate editor; Economic Geology Pub. Co.
Lancaster, Pa.; semi-quarterly; 50c; per year, $3.00.
Educational Review. — 1891; devoted to the study of education in all
its forms; containing articles, discussions, book reviews, foreign
correspondence, and editorial review of current events; edited
by Nicholas Murray Butler; New York: Educational Review
Publishing Co.; monthly, except July and August (108 p.);
per year, $3.00; foreign, $3.50.
Hibbert Journal. — 1902; a quarterly review of religion, theology,
and philosophy; C. J. Keyser, the representative of the American
editorial board; London: Williams and Norgate; per year. $2 50;
per copy, 75c.
Journal of Geography. — 1902; devoted to the interests of teachers of
geography in elementary, secondary, and normal schools; edited
by Richard E. Dodge; published by Teachers College monthly,
except July and August (32 p.), per year, $1.00.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. — 1872; devoted to the study
of diseases of the nervous system; advisory board of editors in-
cludes M. A. Starr and F. Peterson; Alliance Press Co.; monthly
(80 p.), 50c; per year, $5.00.
Journal of Philosophy, Psychology, and Scientific Methods. — 1904;
short articles, reports, discussions, abstracts, and reviews in
the field of scientific philosophy and psychology; edited by
Frederick J. E. Woodbridge; The Science Press; bi-weekly
(28 p.), 15c; per year, $3.00.
Nature-Study Review. — 1904; devoted to all phases of nature-study
in schools; editor, Maurice A. Bigelow; J. F. Woodhull on editorial
committee; Geneva, N. Y. ; (9 monthly numbers) 15c; per year,
$1.00.
Political Science Quarterly. — 1886; devoted to the study of politics
economics, and public law; publishes annually about 25 leading
articles, especially on questions of current interest, and about
130 reviews, and gives a condensed general record of political
events; edited by the Faculty of Political Science (managing
editor, Munroe Smith); Boston and New York: Ginn & Co.;
quarterly (about 190 p.), 75c; per year, $3.00.
Popular Science Monthly. — 1872; devoted to the diffusion of science;
edited by J. McK. Cattell; New York: The Science Press; monthly
(96 p.), 30c; per year, $3.00.
School of Mines Quarterly. — 1879; official organ of the Alumni Associa-
tion of the Schools of Science; original papers on engineering
metallurgy, chemistry, mineralogy, and geology; managing
editor, R. E. Mayer; published by the editors; per year, $2.00.
JOURNALS 425
Science. — 1883; devoted to the advancement of science; edited by
J. McK Cattell; The Macmillan Co.; weekly, 15c; per year (about
2000 p.), $5.00.
Teachers College Record. — 1899; practical problems of elementary
and secondary education, and the professional training of teach-
ers; edited by J. E. Russell; Columbia University Press; bi-
monthly, except July (about 100 p.), 30c; per year, $1.00.
Torreya. — 1901; a monthly journal of botanical notes and news;
devoted to shorter articles than appear in the Bulletin, together
with book reviews; editor, Marshal A. Howe; published by the
Torrey Botanical Club; monthly, 15c; per year, $1.00.
Issued with the Editorial Cooperation of Officers of Columbia
University
American Anthropologist. — 1888; original contributions and reviews
on anthropology ; edited by a board, including Franz Boas; New
York: The Science Press; quarterly, $1.25; per year (about 800
p.), $4.00.
American Historical Review. — 1896; devoted to the interests of his-
torical study in the United States; publishes reviews of important
works, results of original research, documents for the use of
investigators, and news of the work of European scholars; six
editors, including W. M. Sloane; New York: The Macmillan
Co.; quarterly; per copy, $1.00, per year, $4.00.
American Journal of Anatomy. — 1901; edited by a board including
G. S. Huntington; T. H. Morgan and E. B. Wilson, collaborators;
published in Baltimore; quarterly; per year, $5.00.
American Journal of Archaeology. — 1885; official journal of the Ar-
chaeological Institute of America, publishing papers of the In-
stitute and of the Schools at Athens, in Rome, and in Palestine,
and annual reports of these bodies, and issuing special bulletins ;
honorary editors include J. R. Wheeler; business manager is
C. H. Young; New York: The Macmillan Co.; quarterly, $1.50;
per year, $5.00.
American Journal of Physiology. — 1898; edited for the American
Physiological Society; original contributions; seven editors,
including F. S. Lee; Boston: Ginn & Co.; monthly; per volume
(about 500 p.), $5.00.
American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures. — 1896; con-
taining "Hebraica"; J. Dyneley Prince, member of advisory
board of editors ; Chicago : University of Chicago Press ; quar-
terly; per copy, $1.25; per year, $4.00.
American Naturalist. — Covering whole range of "natural history".
426 UNIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY
original articles and reviews; H. M. Richards, associate editor;
Ginn & Co.; monthly; $4.00 per year.
Biochemisches Centralblatt. — 1902 ; devoted to Chemistry and Medicine ;
sub-editors include R. Burton-Opitz; New York: G. E. Stechert;
bi-monthly; per year, $7.00.
Biological Bulletin. — 1899; short original contributions; seven editors,
including E. B. Wilson; Lancaster, Pa.; New Era Printing Co.;
monthly; per volume (six numbers), $3.00.
Biophysikaliscb.es Centralblatt. — 1905; Biology, Physiology, and Pa-
thology; sub-editors include R. Burton-Opitz; Leipzig: Gebruder
Borntraeger; semi-monthly; per year, 30 marks.
Botanisches Centralblatt. — Since 1902 an international review for bo-
tanical literature. Editor-in-chief, H. M. Richards, American
sub-editor for topics connected with physiology and ecology;
Jena, Gustav Fischer; weekly; 28 marks per year.
Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. — 1891; short original
contributions, reviews, reports, notes on current events, lists of
new publications; editors, F. N. Cole, D. E. Smith, and others;
New York : The Macmillan Co. ; monthly, except July and August ;
per year (about 500 p.), $5.00.
Chemical Abstracts. — 1907; M. T. Bogert, editor of organic abstracts,
whose staff includes V. J. Chambers, K. G. Falk, and J. M. Nelson;
Easton, Pa. ; American Chemical Society ; semi-monthly, per year,
$6.00
German-American Annals. — 1897 as Americana Germanica; com-
parative study of the relations of Germany and America; original
researches, critical articles, and reviews; contributing editors
include W. H. Carpenter and Calvin Thomas; Philadelphia:
German- American Historical Society; monthly (about 64 p.),
25c; per year, $3.00.
Goethe Jahrbuch. — 1880; edited by Ludwig Geiger; English- American
bibliography compiled by Rudolf Tombo, Jr. ; Frankfort a./M.;
yearly (about 430 p.), 10 marks.
Hygienisches Centralblatt. — 1906; covering the whole range of hygiene ;
edited by Dr. Paul Sommerfeld; R. Burton-Opitz, American
sub-editor; Leipzig: Gebruder Borntraeger; monthly; 30 marks
per volume.
Internationales Centralblatt fur Laryngologie, Rhinologie und verwandte
Wissenschaften. — 1884; American editor, G. M. Lefferts; Berlin;
A. Hirschwald; monthly; per year (about 700 p.), 15 marks.
Journal of Biological Chemistry. — Editors include C. A. Herter;
N. J. Gies a collaborator.
Journal of Comparative Neurology and Psychology. — 1 89 1 ; original
STUDENT PUBLICATIONS AT COLUMBIA 427
compositions, reviews, and notices; associate editors include
O. S. Strong, with collaboration of H. E. Crampton, F. S. Lee,
T. H. Morgan, E. L. Thorndike, and others; published at Granville,
Ohio; bi-monthly; per year, S4.00.
The Journal of Experimental Zoology. — 1904; original contributions
on experimental zoology, morphology, and physiology; eleven
editors, including E. B. Wilson and T. H. Morgan; Baltimore;
quarterly; per year, $5.00.
Journal of Morphology. — 1SS7; original contributions on purely
morphological subjects; seven editors, including E. B. Wilson)
Boston: Ginn & Co.; quarterly; per year, $9.00.
Medical Review of Reviews. — 1895; associate editor, A. C. Prentice;
New York: Review of Reviews Co. (incorporated) ; monthly
(64 p.); per year, $1.00.
Modern Philology. — 1903 ; research in modern languages and literatures ;
advisory board includes Calvin Thomas; University of Chicago
Press; quarterly ; per year, S3. 00.
Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. — 1900; research
in pure and applied mathematics; the official organ of the Society
for the publication of important papers read before it; Edward
Kasner, associate editor; New York: The MacMillan Co. ; quarterly;
per year (about 500 p.), S5.00.
V. Student Publications at Columbia University
The Barnard Bulletin. — 1901; four pages, weekly; Barnard College
news; per copy, 5c; per year, $1.50.
The Columbia Jester. — 1901; an illustrated comic paper, monthly
during the college year; averages ten pages of reading matter
with illustrations, cartoon, and a cover; per copy, 15c; per year,
Si. 00 (by mail, $1.20).
The Columbia Law Review. — 1901; legal articles and book reviews by
writers of recognized authority, and comment upon recent
cases by the editors; edited by a board of about sixteen students
of the School of Law; monthly, November to June; (70 p.);
per copy, 30c; per year, $2. 00.
The Columbia Monthly. — Founded in 1903, by the combination of the
Columbia Literary Monthly (1893) and Morningside (1896); an
illustrated magazine; articles on Columbia University, of his-
torical and of immediate interest, stories, verse, essays, editorials,
and book reviews; monthly, November to June; per year, $1.00.
The Columbian. — The annual; a bound illustrated volume, containing
statistics of athletics, fraternity membership, class achievements,
and other information concerning student life; published the
428 UNIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY
week before Christmas by third-year men. six elected from Colum-
bia College and six from the Schools of Applied Science. Volume
xvii was published by the class of 1907.
The Columbia Spectator. — 1877; published daily, except Sunday;
edited by a managing board of five, assisted by a board of six
editors and from twelve to twenty-five associate editors; per
copy, 3c; per year, $3.50.
The English Graduate Record. — 1905; record of the life and work
of graduate students of English in the University and after
leaving; three editors with G. R. Carpenter as advisory editor;
single numbers, 15c; double numbers, 25c; per year, $1.00.
The Mortarboard. — 1897; an annual corresponding to the Columbian,
but more literary in character, including, besides the history of
the junior class, poems, stories, sketches, etc.; published by a
board of about eight third- year students of Barnard College;
price, $1.00.
The Senior Class-Book. — A book privately printed by the graduating
class of Columbia College, through an editorial board, and
distributed on class-day. Revived by the class of 1899 and
continued by the succeeding classes; includes pictures and
autobiographies of the members, letters from the faculty, and
the class-day speeches.
The Teachers College Bulletin. — 1901; four pages, weekly; Teachers
College news; per copy, 5c; per year, $1.00 (by mail, $1.50).
SPECIAL FUNDS
The following funds have been given to the Trustees from time to
time and are held by them for the purposes specified:
Gebhard Fund:
Bequest of Frederick Gebhard of $20,000, for the endowment of a
professorship in the German Language and Literature. 1843
Fund of the Society for Promoting Religion and Learning:
Gift (through Professor McVickar) of $1000, for the endowment
of two prizes, "The Society's Greek Seminary Prize," and
"The Society's English Seminary Prize." 1852
Harsen Prize Fund:
Bequest of Jacob Harsen, M.D., Class of 1825, of $31,114.10, for
the endowment of prizes to be awarded to students in the
College of Physicians and Surgeons. J859
Moffat Scholarship Fund:
Bequest of William B. Moffat, M.D., Class of 1838, of $2000, for
the endowment of scholarships. 1S62
Stevens Prize Fund :
Gift of Dr. A. H. Stevens, Professor of Surgery, 1860-1867, of
$1899.88, for the endowment of a prize. 1866
Joseph Mather Smith Prize Fund :
Subscription fund of $2337.81, as a memorial of Dr. Smith, for the
endowment of a prize in the College of Physicians and Surgeons.
1S74
Chanler Prize Fund:
Bequest of John Winthrop Chanler, Class of 1847, °f $1000, for
the endowment of an essay prize. 1877
Schermerhorn Scholarship Fund:
Bequest of John Jones Schermerhorn, Class of 1825, of $5000, for
the endowment of scholarships. 1877
Tyndall Fellowship Fund:
Gift of John Tyndall, LL.D., Professor of Natural History in the
Royal Institution of Great Britain, of $10,945.50, for the en-
dowment of a fellowship in Physics. 1885
429
43° SPECIAL FUNDS
Alonzo Clark Scholarship Fund:
Gift of $14,000 as a memorial of Alonzo Clark, President of the
College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1875-1884, for the endow-
ment of a scholarship. 1887
McKim Fund:
Gift of Charles F. McKim of $20,000, for the endowment of travel-
ling fellowships in Architecture. 1889
Columbia Fellowship in Architecture Fund:
Gift of F. Augustus Schermerhorn, Class of 1868, of $13,000, to the
School of Architecture, applied to the endowment of a travelling
fellowship in Architecture. 1 889
Barnard Fund for the Increase of the Library:
Bequest by President Barnard of $59,501.64, and augmented by a
bequest by his widow, Margaret M. Barnard, of $16,231.67, to
endow a fund for the purchase of books, especially those relating
to physical or astronomical science, and for the award of a medal
for discovery in Physics or Astronomy. 1889 and 1902
Barnard Fellowship Fund:
Bequest by President Barnard of $10,000, for the endowment of a
fellowship for encouraging scientific research. 1889
DaCosta Fund:
Bequest of Charles M. DaCosta, Class of 1855, Trustee 1886-1890,
of $100,000, has provided $86,576.83, applied to the endowment
of the DaCosta Professorship of Zoology; and of $20,000 used
for fitting up the DaCosta Laboratory of Zoology. 1890
)0[
>4 V
Sloane Maternity Hospital Fund:
Gift of William D. Sloane and Emily Thorn Vanderbilt Sloane, of
$475,000, for the endowment of the Hospital. 1890
1904
Vanderbilt Clinic Endowment Fund:
Gift of Cornelius Vanderbilt, William K. Vanderbilt, Frederick
W. Vanderbilt, and George W. Vanderbilt, of $115,000, for the
endowment of the Clinic. 1890
Avery Architectural Fund:
Gift of Samuel P. Avery and Mary Ogden Avery of $30,000, in
memory of their deceased son, Henry Ogden Avery. The in-
come to be applied to the purchase of books relating to archi-
tecture, decorations, and allied arts. 1890
Loubat Fund:
Gift of Joseph F. Loubat of $7000, forTthe endowment of two
prizes of $1000 and $400 to be awarded 'once in every five years.
See page 397. 1892
SPECIAL FUNDS 431
Trowbridge Fund:
Gift of $10,000, for the endowment of a fellowship in Engineering
as a memorial of William P. Trowbridge, Ph.D., LL.D., Pro-
fessor of Mining Engineering, 1877-1892, ' subject at present to
a life interest. 1893
Pulitzer Scholarship Fund:
Gift of Joseph Pulitzer of $100,000, for the endowment of scholar-
ships. 1893
Bennett Prize Fund:
Gift of James Gordon Bennett of $1000 for the endowment of an
essay prize. ^93
Henry Drisler Classical Fund:
Gift of $10,000, presented by Seth Low, LL.D., Class of 1870, in
commemoration of the semi-centennial of Professor Drisler in
the service of the College, for the endowment of a fund for the
purchase of books and works of art for the Greek and Latin
departments. 1894
Grant Squires Fund:
Gift of Grant Squires, Class of 1885, of $1050, for the endowment
of an essay prize. 3:895
Stuart Scholarship Fund:
Gift of Mrs. Cornelia A. Atwill of $6000, for the endowment of the
"Stuart Scholarships" in memory of her grandsons, Sidney
Barculo Stuart, Class of 1880, and Eugene Talman Stuart, Class
of 1881. 1896
Alexander I. Cotheal Fund for the Increase of the Library:
Gift of Mrs. Samuel R. Lawrence and Mrs. James R. Swords of
$6000, in memory of their brother, Alexander I. Cotheal, for
the endowment of a fund for the purchase of books in the
Oriental languages, or relating to Oriental subjects. 1896
Robert Center Fund for Instruction in Music:
Gift of Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Ludlow of real estate and securities
valued at $178,046.50, for the endowment of a fund for instruc-
tion in music as a memorial of her son, Robert Center, applied
to the maintenance of a professorship. 1896
Students' Loan Fund:
Gift of Jacob H. Schiff of $5000, for the aid of needy students.
1896
H. C. Bunner Prize Fund:
Gift of $1000, for the endowment of an essay prize. 1896
1 Income paid to Mrs. Trowbridge during pleasure of Trustees.
432 SPECIAL FUNDS
Illig Fund:
Bequest of William C. Illig, Class of 1882 (S. of M.), of $2000, for
the endowment of scholarship medals. 1897
MOSENTHAL FELLOWSHIP FUND:
Gift of friends of the late Joseph Mosenthal of $7500, to found a
fellowship in Music. 1898
Perkins Fellowship Fund:
Bequest of Willard B. Perkins of $5700, for a travelling fellowship
in Architecture, awarded quadrennially. 1898
Schiff Fellowship Fund:
Gift of Jacob H. Schiff of $15,000, to found a fellowship to be
awarded by the Faculty of Political Science on the nomination
of the donor or his eldest living male descendant. 1898
Seidl Fund:
The proceeds, amounting to $12,000, of a memorial performance
(March 23, 1899), in honor of the late Anton Seidl. The in-
come to be paid to Mrs. Seidl during her lifetime, and there-
after "to be applied to a Fellowship in Music in Columbia
University." ^99
Waring Municipal Fund:
The Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, in 1898,
raised by public subscription the sum of $100,000, to perpetuate
the memory of the late Col. George E. Waring. The income
thereof to be paid to the widow and daughter of Colonel Waring
during their lifetime, and thereafter to be devoted to instruction
in municipal affairs. *899
Fund for the Endowment of the Abraham Jacobi Ward for
Children in Roosevelt Hospital:
Gift of an anonymous donor of $50,000, "to endow a ward for
children in the Roosevelt Hospital." *899
Beck Funds:
The late Charles Bathgate Beck, A.B. Class of 1877, LL.B. Class
of 1879 (who died in 1894), bequeathed the sum of $10,000:
$2000 to found one scholarship in Columbia College; $8000 to
endow a prize in the Law School. *899
Curtis Fund:
Gift of the George William Curtis Memorial Committee of $10,000,
to establish the George William Curtis Fellowship in the School
of Political Science. 1899
SPECIAL FUNDS 433
Dyckman Fund:
Gift of Isaac Michael Dyckman of $1 0,000, in memory of his
uncles, Dr. Jacob Dyckman and Dr. James Dyckman, both of
the College of Physicians and Surgeons, to establish the "Dyck-
man Fund for the Encouragement of Biological Research."
1899
Alexander Moncrief Proudfit Fellowship Fund:
Legacy of $15,000 from the late Alexander Moncrief Proudfit, tc
found the Alexander Moncrief Proudfit Fellowship in Letters.
1899
Maria McLean Proudfit Fellowship Fund, School of Medicine:
Legacy of $15,000 from the late Alexander Moncrief Proudfit, to
found the Maria McLean Proudfit Fellowship in Medicine.
1899
Trust Fund for Psychology:
Gift of $100,000 from John D. Rockefeller, as an endowment of the
head professorship of the Psychological Department of Columbia
University. ^99
Carl Schurz Fellowship Fund:
Fund of $10,000 from the Carl Schurz Fund Committee, to estab-
lish a fellowship in honor of Carl Schurz. 1900
Carl Schurz Library Fund:
Fund of $10,000 from the Carl Schurz Fund Committee, estab-
lished in honor of Carl Schurz, the income to strengthen the
Library in the field of the German Language and Literature.
1900
Law Book Trust Fund:
Created by act of the Trustees on March 5, 1900, by the consoli-
dation of the Alexander Cole Gift ($1500); John Jay Jenkins
Legacy ($500) ; John McKeon Fund ($1000) ; Sampson Simpson
Fund ($1000); and the Edgar J. Nathan Gift ($250); total.
$4250, the income to be applied to the purchase of law books.
1900
Campbell Scholarship Fund:
Gifts of $3000 each from Miss Maria L. Campbell and Miss Cath-
arine B. Campbell, for the establishment of two scholarships in
the College, in memory of Robert B. Campbell of the Class of
1844, and Henry P. Campbell of the Class of 1847. 1900
German Lecture Fund:
Gifts to the sum of $1000 for an endowment of Public Lectures in
German at the University. 190 1
Eaton Professorship Fund:
Bequest of the late Dorman B. Eaton of $100,000, to endow and
434 SPECIAL FUNDS
maintain a Professorship of Administrative Law and Munici-
pal Science. 1901
Dean Lung Professorship in Chinese Fund:
Gift of anonymous friends of $213,000, towards the founding of a
Department of Chinese Languages, Literatures, Religion, and
Law, and especially for the establishment of the Dean Lung
Professorship of Chinese. 190 1
Class of 1848 Scholarship Fund:
Gift of $10,000 of an anonymous friend to found two scholarships
in the College. 1902
George William Curtis Medals Fund:
Gift of $1000 from an associate of George William Curtis in the
Civil Service Reform work to establish this fund. 1902
Philolexian Centennial Washington Prize Fund:
Gift to the Philolexian Society from J. Ackerman Coles, Class of
1864. The accumulated interest is to be expended every four
years for a duplicate of the life-size bronze bust of George
Washington, modelled from life at Mount Vernon, by Jean
Antoine Houdon, to be cast at the Barbedienne Foundry,
Paris, France. The bust will be given to that member of the
Philolexian Society, who, in the opinion of the President of the
University, the President of the Society, and a third man of
their choosing, shall be deemed most worthy, upon his delivery
of an original patriotic address. 1902
Phcenix Legacy:
Amounting at present to $178,597.08, being on account of one-
third part of the residuary estate of the late Stephen Whitney
Phcenix, bequeathed to Columbia College in 188 1. 1902
Julius Beer Lecture Fund:
Legacy of the late Julius Beer of $10,000 to establish this fund.
1903
James S. Carpentier Fund:
Gift of $125,000 from General Horace W. Carpentier of the Class
of 1848, in memory of his brother, James S. Carpentier, for the
benefit of the Law School. I9°3
GUSTAV GOTTHEIL FELLOWSHIP FUNDI
Gift of $10,000 from Temple Emanu-El to establish a fellowship,
the holder to be nominated by the Professors in the Semitic
Languages. i9°3
Loubat Professorship Fund:
Gift of $100,000 from Joseph F. Loubat to establish the Loubat
Professorship in American Archaeology. x9°3
SPECIAL FUNDS 435
Richard Butler Scholarship Fund:
Gift of $5000 from Mrs. Richard Butler in memory of her deceased
husband, Richard Butler, open to students born in the State
of Ohio. 1903
Darling Prize Fund:
Bequest of the late Edward A. Darling, formerly Superintendent
of Buildings and Grounds, of $1000 to endow an annual prize in
the School of Engineering. !903
Joseph Pulitzer Fund for School of Journalism:
Gift of $1,000,000 from Joseph Pulitzer to establish and endow a
School of Journalism in Columbia University. 1903
R. S. Carpentier Fund:
Gift of $100,000 from General H. W. Carpentier towards a pro-
fessorship in the Medical School, in memory of Reuben S.
Carpentier. 1904
Cornelius Heeney Gottsberger Scholarship Fund:
Bequest of Ellen Josephine Banker of $9500 to establish a scholar-
ship in memory of her deceased brother, Cornelius Heeney
Gottsberger. 1904
Philolexian Prize Fund:
Fund of $1326.80 from the Philolexian Society, the income to
be paid to the Society for prizes. 1904
Toppan Prize Fund:
Gift of $4000 from Mrs. Sarah M. Toppan to endow, in memory
of her late husband, Robert Noxon Toppan, a prize in the
School of Law. 1904
Ernest Kempton Adams Fund for Physical Research:
Gift of $50,000 from Edward D. Adams, in memory of his son,
the late Ernest Kempton Adams, E.E., 1897 ; A.M., 1898. 1904
Garth Memorial Fund:
Gift of $16,250 from Horace E. Garth to establish a fellowship in
Political Economy in memory of his son, the late Granville
W. Garth. 1904
Guy B. Miller Fund:
Bequest of the late Guy B. Miller of $10,000, of the Class of 1898,
College of Physicians and Surgeons, for general purposes of the
Medical School. 1904
Schiff Professorship Fund:
Gift of $100,000 from Jacob H. Schiff for the endowment of a
Professorship of Social Economy in order to make possible a
close affiliation between Columbia University and the New
York School of Philanthropy. 1905
436 SPECIAL FUNDS
Theodore Roosevelt Professorship Fund:
Gift of James Speyer of $50,000 for the endowment of a pro-
fessorship of American History and Institutions in the University
of Berlin. I9°5
Mathematical Prize Fund:
Gift of Mrs. Louis T. Hoyt of $5000, in memory of her nephew,
John Dash van Buren, Jr. 1906
E. B. Convers Prize Fund:
Gift of Miss Alice and Miss Clara B. Convers of $1000, in memory
of their brother, Ebenezer Buckingham Convers, LL.B., 1866,
to endow a prize in the Law School. 1906
E. R. Carpentier Fund:
Gift of Mrs. Maria H. Williamson of $150,000 for the endowment
of a professorship or an endowed lectureship on the Origin
and Growth of Civilizations among Men. 1906
Blumenthal Fund:
Gift of George Blumenthal of $100,075 f°r the endowment of
a Chair of Politics. 1906
Henry Bergh Fund:
Anonymous gift of $100,000, the income to be used for the in-
culcating of a spirit of kindness, and consideration toward the
lower animals. i9°7
ACADEMIC CALENDAR
1907 — Sept. 25 — Wednesday, First half-year, 154th year, begins.
Registration ceases for students matriculating for
the first time. Later applications received only
upon payment of an additional fee of $5.
Fellows and Scholars to report to the Registrar.
Oct. 1 — Tuesday, Last day of matriculation for students
in the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy
and Pure Science.
Oct. 15 — Tuesday, Stated meeting of University Council.
Nov. 5 — Tuesday, Election Day, holiday.
Nov. 28 — Thursday, to Nov. 30, Saturday, inclusive, Thanks-
giving holidays.
Dec. 17 — Tuesday, Stated meeting of University Council.
Dec. 21 — Saturday, to
1908 — Jan. 4 — Saturday, inclusive. Christmas holidays.
Jan. 20 — Monday, Mid-year entrance examinations begin.
Jan. 22 — Wednesday, Mid-year examinations begin.
Feb. 1 — Saturday, First half-year ends.
Feb. 3 — Monday, Second half-year begins. Registration
ceases for students entering the second half-year.
Later applications received only upon payment of
an additional fee of $5. Fellows and Scholars to
report to the Registrar.
Feb. 18 — Tuesday, Stated meeting of University Council.
Feb. 22 — Saturday, Washington's Birthday, holiday.
Mar. 2 — Monday, Last day for filing applications for Uni-
versity Fellowships.
April 1 — Wednesday, Last day for filing applications for
examination for higher degrees m 1907-8, and for
presenting dissertations for the degree of Doctor
of Philosophy.
April 14 — Tuesday, Stated meeting of University Council.
April 16 — Thursday, to April 20, Monday, inclusive, Easter
holidays for students in such schools as may be
designated by the University Council
May 1 — Friday, Last day for filing applications for Univer-
sity Scholarships and for presenting essays for
the degree of Master of Arts .
437
438 ACADEMIC CALENDAR
May 1 1 — Monday, Final examinations for candidates for grad-
uation begin.
May 19 — Tuesday, Stated meeting of University Council.
May 24 — Sunday, Baccalaureate service.
May 25 — Monday, Class Day.
May 26 — Tuesday, Alumni Day.
May 27 — Wednesday, Commencement Day (see p. 385).
May 28 — Thursday, Final examinations begin.
May 30 — Saturday, Memorial Day, holiday.
June 10 — Wednesday, Second half-year ends.
June 15 — Monday, Entrance examinations begin.
July 7 — Tuesday, Ninth Summer Session opens.
Aug. 14 — Friday, Ninth Summer Session closes.
Sept. 1 — Tuesday, Last day for filing lists of elective courses
in Columbia College and Barnard College.
Sept. 14 — Monday, Entrance examinations, and examinations
for deficient and debarred students begin.
Sept. 16 — Wednesday, Registration begins.
Sept. 2 2— Tuesday , Registration ceases for students previously
matriculated. Later applications received only
upon payment of an additional fee of $5.
Sept. 23 — Wednesday, First half-year, 155th year, begins.
Registration ceases for students matriculating
for the first time. Later applications received
only upon payment of an additional fee of $5.
Fellows and Scholars report to the Registrar.
Note. — In 1908 and thereafter Commencement Day will fall on the
last Wednesday in May, final examinations for all students, except
those in the graduating classes, beginning on the day following Com-
mencement.
SUMMARY
OFFICERS
Professors * 5 7
Adjunct Professors 64
Clinical Professors and Lecturers 13
Instructors 85
Demonstrators 1 2
Tutors 39
Curators 2
Lecturers and other Special Officers of Instruction 32
Assistants 7 1
Clinical Assistants 75
University Officers of Instruction
Other Instructors in Teachers College
Other Instructors in College of Pharmacy..
University Officers of Administration 17
Other Officers of Administration, Teachers
College and College of Pharmacy 8
25
Emeritus Officers x 7
56
550
3
59
609
Total 651
Horace Mann School and Speyer School (not
included above) 79
STUDENTS
Columbia College:
Fourth-year class m
Third-year " 141
Second-year " 167
First-year " 132
Non-matriculated 56
The School of Law :
Third-year class 59
Second-year " 83
First-year " 85
Non-matriculated 20
607
247
Carried forward 854
439
44° • SUMMARY OF STUDENTS
Brought forward 854
The School of Medicine:
Fourth-year class 80
Third-year " 76
Second-year " 67
First-year " 62
Non-matriculated 13
298
The Schools of Applied Science:
Fourth-year class 61
Third-year " 125
Second-year 191
First-year " 186
Non-matriculated 23
586
Fine Arts:
Architecture 122
Music 22
144
The Graduate Faculties of Political Science, Philo-
sophy, and Pure Science 897
Total 2779
Barnard College 420
Teachers College . 850
College of Pharmacy
(Not included in Directory). . . 229
Total 4278
Deduct Double Registration 182
Net Total of Resident Students. . . 4096
Summer Session Students, 1907 J392
Deduct Double Registration jj6
1056
Grand Total of Resident Students 5*52
Students in extension courses 3085
INDEX
Academic Calendar, 437
Discipline, 26
Adams Research Fellowship, 389
Administration, Officers of, xiv
Barnard College, 308
College of Pharmacy, 355
Teachers College, 326
Administrative Board, Extension Teach-
ing, xvi, 366
Summer Session, xvi
Admission, Architecture, 291
Barnard College, 309
Columbia College, 172
Design, School of, 297
Fine Arts, 289
Law, 196
Medicine, 209
Mines, Engineering, and Chem-
istry, 223
Music, 296
Pharmacy, College of, 357
Political Science, 250
Advanced English, 159
to Advanced Standing. See Ad-
vanced Standing.
as Non-matriculated Students.
See Non-matriculated Stu-
dents.
Advanced Standing, Admission to, Bar-
nard, 311
Columbia College, 1 74
Fine Arts, 289
Law School, 196
Medicine, 211
Mines, Engineering, and Chem-
istry, 225
Advisory Committee on Art, xvi
Alonzo Clark Scholarship, 406
Alumni Association, Fellowships (School
of Medicine), 405
Competitive Scholarships, 399
Prize, College, 401
Prizes, New Jersey, 398
School of Medicine, 406
Scholarships (College), 401
American History and Institutions, Pro-
fessorship of, 32
American Museum of Natural History, 33
Lectures at, 35
Anatomy, Department of, 42
Announcements, 26
Annual Fellowships, 393
Annual Scholarships, 396
Anthropology, Department of, 45
Apparatus, Deposits for, 30
Application for Entrance Examinations,
i54
Applied Science, Faculty of, 222
Scholarships and Prizes in, 407
Appointment Committees, 31
Aquarium, New York, 34
Arabic, Courses in, 114
Archaeology. See Greek and Latin.
Architecture, Department of, 46
Architecture, School op, 46, 290-295
Architectural Engineering, 294
Graduate Courses, 294
Scholarships and Fellowships,
41 o
Armenian, Course in, 122
Art, Metropolitan Museum of, 33
Advisory Committee on, xvi
Arts, Master of. See Degrees.
Assistance of Students, Provision for the,
3°
Assistants, 1 7
Clinical, 18
Assyrian, Courses in, 123
Astronomy, Department of, 49
Athletics, Committee on, 39
Attendance, 26
Awards of Prizes and Honors, 1907, 386-
4*5
Bacteriology and Hygiene, Department
of, So
Barnard College, 23, 306-323
Courses of Instruction. See De-
partmental Statements.
Dormitory, 38
Publications, 417
Scholarships, Honors, and Prizes,
411
Trustees, 306
Barnard Fellowship, 388
Medal, 396
Beck Prize Scholarship, 405
Beck Scholarship, 401
Benefactors Scholarships, College, 399
School of Law, 405
Schools of Mines, Engineering,
and Chemistry, 408
Bennett Prize, 396
Berlin, Theodore Roosevelt Professorship
in University of, 32
Bibliography, University, 418-428
Biological Chemistry, 51
Botanical Garden. 34
Botany, Department of, 53
Entrance Requirement in, 159
Brooklyn Scholarships,
Barnard College, 412
Columbia College, 400
Brooks Hall, 38
Buildings, Grounds, and Equipment,
School of Medicine, 205
Bulletins of Information, 26
Bunner Medal, 397
Butler, Richard, Scholarship, 39s
By-Laws, Mines, Engineering, and Chem-
istry, 226
Calendar, Academic, 437
Commencement, 385
Campbell Scholarships, 401
Cartwright Prize, 407
Lectures, 207
441
442
INDEX
Certificate in Architecture, Course leading
to, 293
Certificate in Music, 296
Columbia College, 174
Curriculum for, 296
Chanler Historical Prize. 402
Chapel. See Worship, Public.
Chemical Engineering, Course in, 234
Chemistry, Department of, 57
Biological, Department of, 51
Courses in, 235
Entrance Requirement in, 1 59
Chemistry and Engineering, Schools
of, 24
Chinese, Department of, 120
Civil Engineering, Department of, 62
Civil Engineering, Course in, 231
Clark, Alonzo, Scholarship, 406
Class of '48 Scholarships, 401
Class of '70 Fellowship, 389
Clinic, Vanderbilt, 206
Clinical Assistants, 18
Instruction, 66
Pathology, Department of, 68
Professors and Lecturers, ir
Clinics at the Hospitals, 207
Collections. See Departments of Instruc-
tion.
College, Barnard, 23
College, Columbia, 21, 22, 171
Scholarships and Prizes in,
398
Kings, 21
College of Pharmacy, 24, 354-362
College of Physicians and Sur-
geons, 24
College, Teachers, 24
Columbia Fellowship in Architecture, 409
Quarterly, 423
University Press, 418
Commencement Calendar, 385
Committee, Advisory, on Art, xvi
Appointment, 31
on Athletics, 39
on Employment for Students, 30
on Entrance Examinations, 154
Committees, Applied Science, 222
Barnard College, 308
Columbia College, 171
Fine Arts, 288
Medicine, 204
Trustees, xii
Barnard College, 306
Commons, University, 37
Comparative Literature, Department of,
66
Competitive Scholarships, 398
Columbia College, 399
Barnard College, 412
Comptroller of Student Organizations, 39
Conditions, Admission on, Barnard, 311
College, 187
Medicine, 211
Contents, Table of, iii
Cooper Union, Lectures at, 35
Council, University, xii, 22
Courses. See Departments of Instruction.
Numbering of, 41
Courses of Instruction, Mines, Engineer-
ing, and Chemistry, 223, 2 2 9-2 3s
Architecture, 46
College, 175
Extension Teaching, 366
Law, 194
Medicine, 207, 213
Pharmacy, College of, 355
Philosophy, 255
Political Science, 251
Pure Science, 259
Teachers College, 330
Courses, Elective, College, 178
Prescribed, College, 176
Courts, Practice (Law), 196
Credit, Grades and, College, 179
Credit Courses, Extension Teaching, 197
Curriculum, Law, 197
Curtis Fellowship, 389
Medals, 402
University Scholarships, 394
Daly, Marcus, Scholarship, 408
Dante Society, Prize of the, 398
Darling Prize, 409
Definitions of Requirements (Entrance
Examinations), 158
Degrees, Conferred during 1906-07, 371-
38s
Architecture, 374
Bachelor of Arts, 370, 371
Bachelor of Laws, 198, 372
Bachelor of Science:
in Architecture, 374
in Chemistry, 374
Civil Engineer, 371
Doctor of Medicine, 372
Doctor of Philosophy, 164, 383
Education, 374-379
Electrical Engineer, 374
Engineer of Mines, 373
Honorary, 385
Master of Arts, 164, 379
Master of Laws, 169
Mechanical Engineer, 374
Pharmacy, 379
Demonstrators, 14
Departmental Statements 41-153
Departments of Instruction, 41
Deposits for Apparatus, 30
Dermatology, Courses in, 67
Design, Department of, 71
Elective Courses, 300
Studio Work, 300
Design, National Academy of, 33
Design, School of, 297-301
Deutscher Verein, 92
Diplomas, Teachers College, Award of, 3 74
Discipline, Academic, 26
Diseases of Children, 71
Dismissal, Honorable. See Withdrawal.
Dissertation for Degree of Ph.D., 164
Division of Entrance Examinations, 1 55
Division of
Biology, 25
Chemistry, 25
Classical Philology, 25
Education, 25
Engineering, 25
Fine Arts, 25
Geology, Geography, and Min-
eralogy, 25
History, Economics, and Public
Law, 25
Mathematical and Physical Sci-
ence, 25
Medicine, 25
Mining and Metallurgy, 25 _
Modern Languages and Liter-
atures, 25
Oriental Languages, 25
Pharmacy, 25
Philosophy, Psychology, and
Anthropology, 25
Physical Education, 25
Private Law, 25
INDEX
443
Divisional Organization, 25
Doctor of Philosophy. See Degrees.
Domestic Art, 72
Domestic Science, 72
Dormitories, 37
for Women, 38
Draughting, 83
Drawing, Entrance Requirement in, 159
Drawings, Submission of, for Entrance,
158
Drew Theological Seminary, 34
Drisler Fellowship, 390
Dutch, Course in, 91
Ear, Diseases of. See Otology.
Earl Hall, 39
Economics and Social Science, Depart-
ment of, 72
Education, Department of, 75
Egyptian, Courses in, 1 24
Elective Courses. See under each De-
partment.
Mines, Chemistry, and Engineer-
ing, open to Students in
College, 177
Columbia College, 178
Design, 300
Electrical Engineering, Department of, 80
Course in, 233
Embrvology, Histology and, Courses in,
96
Emeritus Officers, xvi
Employment for Students, Committee on,
3°
Engineering, Architectural, 294
Civil, 62
Electrical, 80
Mechanical, 109
Sanitary, 64
Engineering and Chemistry, Schools
of, 24, 222
Engineering Draughting, Department of,
83
English, Advanced, 159
English, Department of, 83
Entrance Requirement in, 159
Enrolment. See Registration.
Entrance Conditions and Probation, Col-
lege, i7S
Barnard, 311
Entrance Examinations, 154—163
Epigraphy. See Greek, Latin, and Se-
mitic.
Equipment. See Departments of Instruc-
tion and Announcements of Schools.
Ethics. See Philosophy.
Ethiopic, Course in, 124
Examinations and Standing, Mines,
Chemistry, and Engineering, 225
Examinations, Entrance, 154-163
Pee for. See Fees.
Places of, 156
In Course:
Columbia College, 178
Fine Arts, 290
Law, 156
Schedule of, 156
Subjects, 156
Expenses, Students', 30
Extension Teaching, Administrative
Board, xvi, 25, 366—369
Eye, Diseases of the. See Opthalmology.
Faculties and Teaching Staff, Members
of, 1-20
Schools and Organization by, 22
Faculty, Applied Science, 222
Barnard College, .-,07
Columbia College, 1 7 1
College of Pharmacy, 354
Fine Arts, 24, 287-305
Law, 193
Medicine, 204
Philosophy, 23, 253-255
Political Science, 23, 249-252
Pure Science, 23. 256-259
Scholarships. College, 400
School of Law. 404
School of Medicine, 407
Schools of Mines, Chemistry,
and Engineering, 408
Summer Session, 363
Teachers College, 324
Fees, 27-30
Entrance Examination, 155
For Examinations, 28
For Fellows and Scholars, 386
For Late Registration, 27
For Summer Courses in Survey-
ing. 29
In Mining and Geodesy, 30
Laboratory, 29
Miscellaneous Regulations, 30
Special Laboratory, 29
Fellowships, 386 ff.
Adams, Research, 389
Alumni Association, Medicine,
405
Annual, 393
Barnard, 388
Class of '70, 389
Columbia, in Architecture, 409
Drisler, 390
Education, in (Teachers College),
413
Foundation ot, 393
Garth, 390
George William Curtis, 389
Gottsberger, 391
Honorary, 387
McKim, 410
Mosenthal, 391
Perkins, 410
Proudfit, in Letters, 391
Proudfit, in Medicine, 406
Regulations, 386
Special, 3 88
Schiff, 392
School of Architecture, 409
School of Medicine, 405
Schurz, Carl, 392
Tyndall. 388
University, 386
Finance, Courses in. 72
Fine Arts. Department of, 24, S7
Faculty of, 287
Fiske, Scholarship, 412
Foreign Service, 24, 34, 251
Foundation of Fellowships, 393
Scholarships, 396
French, Courses in, 144
Entrance Requirement in. 160
Fund, Arthur Brooks, 413
Funds, Special, 429-436
Garth Fellowship. 390
General Scholarships, 400
General Regulations, 26
General Statement, 21
Barnard College, 308'
College of Pharmacy. 355
Entrance Examinations. 154
444
INDEX
General Statement — {Continued)
Extension Teaching, 367
Fine Arts, Faculty of, 288
School of Architecture, 290
Music, 295
Philosophy, 255
Political Science, 250
Pure Science, 257
Schools of Mines, Engineering,
and Chemistry, 222
Summer Session, 364
Teachers College, 329
The University, 21
General Theological Seminary, 34
Courses, at, 99, 132
Prizes, 402
Genito-Urinary Diseases, Courses in, 67
Geodesy. See Astronomy and Fees.
Geography, Department of, 87
Geology, Department of, 87
German, Entrance Requirement in, 160
Germanic Languages and Literatures, De-
partment of, 89
Philology, Course in, 91
Gothic, Course in, 91
Gottsberger, Fellowship, 391
Grades and Credit, Mines, Engineering,
and Chemistry, 239
Columbia College, 179
Graduation, Requirements for, Medical
School, 212
Grant Squires Prize, 397
Greek, Department of, 93
Entrance Requirement in, 160
Gymnasium, The, 135
Gynecology, Department. of, 95
Harper Scholarships, 399
Harsen Scholarships, 407
Hartley Hall, 37
Hebrew, Courses in, 122
Herman, Botanical Prize, 413
Hewitt Scholarships, 399
Higher Degrees. See Degrees.
High Standing, Additional Credit for, Col-
lege, 178
Histology and Embryology, Department
of, 96
Historical, University, 21
Historical Statement, Medicine, 205
History and Political Philosophy, De-
partment of, 96
Entrance Requirement in, 160
Honorable Dismissal. See Withdrawal.
Honorary Degrees, 385
Fellows, 387
Scholar, 395
Honors, Barnard, 411
College, 179, 404
Horace Mann Schools, 327, 331
Hospital, Clinics at, 207
Economics, Courses in, 99
Sloane Maternity, 206
Hospitals, 34
Hygiene, Bacteriology and. Courses in, 50
Illig Medals, 409
Indo-Iranian Languages, Department o£,
121
Industrial Chemistry, Course in, 56
Information, Bulletin of, 26
Instruction, Clinical. See Clinics.
Course of Architecture, 46
College, 1 7s
Extension Teaching, 367
Law, 197
Medicine, 207, 213
Pharmacy, College of, 355
Philosophy, 25s
Political Science, 251
Pure Science, 259
Instruction, Course of, Teachers College,
33°
Departments of, 41-153
Method of, College of Pharmacy,
357
Officers of, 318
Barnard College, 306
College of Pharmacy, 354
Extension Teaching, 366
Suminer Session, 363
Teachers College, 324
Plan of, Medical School, 207
Instructors, 1 2
Italian, Courses in, 145
Entrance Requirement in, 161
Jewish Theological Seminary, 33
Jones, John D., Scholarship. 395
Journalism, School of, 24
Journals Issued under Editorial Direction
of Officers of University, 423
Issued with Editorial Co-opera-
tion of Officers of Univer-
sity, 425
Jurisprudence, Public Law and, Depart-
ment of, 104
Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship, 32
Kindergarten Teaching, Courses in, 80
King's College, 21
Kohn Mathematical Prize, 412
Laboratories. See Departments of In-
struction.
Fees, for Special Students, 2 9
for Summer Courses in Sur-
veying, 29
Special, 29
Language, Science of, Course in, 122
Languages, Requirement in, for the De-
gree of Ph.D., 168
Laryngology, Courses in, 68
Latin, Department of, 100
Entrance Requirement in, 1 61
Law, Division of, 103
Library, 198
Municipal, 103
Private, 103
Public, 104
Law, School op, 24
Scholarships and Prizes in, 404
Lecture Courses, Extension Teaching, 381
Lecturers. 16
Clinical, Professors and, 11
Special, 1907-08, 11
Lectures, Public, 35
Cartwright, 207
in French, 147
in German, 92
in Indo-Iranian Languages, 122
Medical, 207
Library, The, 35-37
Law, 198
Literature, Comparative, Department of.
66
Livingston Hall, 38
Loubat Prizes, 397
McKim Fellowships, 410
Major Subjects for University Degrees 165
Manual Training, Courses in, (see Shop
Work).
Marcus Daly Scholarship, 408
INDEX
445
Master of Arts. See Degrees.
Master of Laws (See Degrees)
Materia Medica, Pharmacology, and
Therapeutics. Department of. 128
Mathematical Physics, Courses in. 138
Mathematics, Department of, 106
Entrance Requirements in, 161
Matriculation, 26
Fee, 27
Matriculated and Non-matricu-
lated Students, 26
Mechanical Engineering, Department of,
109
Course in, 232
Mechanics, Courses in (sec Mathematical
Physics).
Medals and Prizes, 39 6
Barnard, 396
Bunner, 397
Curtis. 402
Illig. 409 , . _
National Society of the Sons of
the American Revolution,
39 6
Medical Visitor, 38
Medicine. Practice of, Department of, 142
Medicine. School of, 24, 204-221
Fellowships, Scholarships, and
Prizes in, 405
Summer Courses in, 214, 365
Metallurgical Engineering, Course in, 230
Metallurgy. Department of, in
Method of Instruction, College of Phar-
macy. 357
Metropolitan Museum of Art. 33
Lectures at, 35
Mind. Diseases of the. See Neurology.
Mineralogy. Department of, 113
Mines School of, 24
Mining, Department of , 1 1 4
Engineering, Course in, 229
Summer Course in, 115
Minor Sub.iects for University Degrees, 1 65
Moffat Scholarships, 401
Mosenthal Fellowship, 391
Municipal Law, Courses in, 103
Museums. See Departments of Instruc-
tion. Also. pp. 33-34
Music, Department of. 116
Entrance Requirement in, 162
School of, 29s
National Academy of Design. 33
National Society of the Sons of the
American Revolution Medal, 396
Nature Study, courses in, 118
Neurology. Department of. 1 1 S
New Brunswick Theological Seminary, 34
New Jersey Alumni Association Prizes, 398
New York Botanical Garden, 34
Non-Competitive Scholarships (Barnard),
412
Non-Matriculated Students, Mines, En-
gineering, and Chemistry, 226
Barnard. 311
Columbia College, 174
Fine Arts, 289
Law, 196
Medicine, 212
Pure Science. 258
Nose. Diseases of. See Laryngology.
Note-Books, Submission of, jor Entrance.
1S8
Obstetrics, Department of, 119
Officers of Administration, xiv
Officers, of the Faculty of Applied Science,
222
Barnard College, 306
College of Pharmacy, 354
Columbia College, 171
Emeritus, xvi
Law, 193
Medicine, 204
Philosophy, 253
Political Science, 249
Pure Science. 256
Summer Session, 363
Teachers College, 324
Summary of, 439
Official Publications, 416
Ophthalmology. Courses in. 68
Options in the Professional Schools for
Columbia College Students, 177
Barnard College, 314
Organic Chemistry, Course in, 247
Organization, 22
Barnard College, 308
Organizations. Student, 39
Oriental History, 122
Oriental Languages, Division of, 1 20
Orthopedic Surgery, Courses in, 68
Other Institutions, Relations with, 32-34
Other Living Accommodations, 38
Otology, Courses in, 68
Outline of Professional Courses of Study,
Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry,
229-235
Pathology, Department of. 125
Pediatrics. See Diseases of Children.
Perkins Fellowship, 410
Pharmacology, Materia Medica, and
Therapeutics, Department of, 1 28
Pharmacy, College of, 24, 127
Publications of, 418
Pharynx. Diseases of. See Laryngology.
Philanthropy (N. Y.), School of, 34
Philology, Courses in Romance, 146
Course in Germanic, 91
Philosophy, Courses in. 130
Philosophy and Psychology, Division of,
25
Philosophy, Doctor of. See Degrees.
Philosophy, School of, 23, 233-255
Regulations for University De-
grees under, 1 66—1 69
Photography, Course in, 126
Photomicrography, Course in, 126
Physical Education, Department of, 135
Physicians and Surgeons, College of,
24, 204
Physics, Department of, 136
Entrance Requirement in, 162
Physiography, Entrance Requirement in,
1 62
Physiology, Department of, 140
Political Economy, Courses in, 72
Political Philosophy, Courses in, 99
History and, Department of, 96
Political Science, School of, 23, 249-
352
Regulations for University De-
grees under, 1 65-1 69
Politics, Department of, 100
Portuguese, Course in, 146
Practice Courts (Law), 196
Practice of Medicine, Department of, 142
Prescribed Courses, College, 1 76
President, The, 22
President's University Scholarships, 394
Press. Columbia University, 418
Private Law, Courses in, 103
446
INDEX
Prizes, Medals and, 396
Prize, Alumni Association, College, 401
Alumni Association, Medicine. 406
Belles Lettres, undergraduate in, 403
Bennett, 396
Cartvvright, 407
Chanler Historical. 402
Dante Society, 398
Darling, 409
Grant Squires. 397
General Theological Seminary, 402
Herman Botanical, 413
Joseph Mather Smith, 406
Kappa Psi, 415
Kohn Mathematical, 413
Stevens Triennial, 407
Toppan, 398
Van Buren, John Dash, Jr., in
Mathematics, 403
Prizes, Barnard College, 413
College of Pharmacy, 415
Columbia College, 401-403
Loubat, 397
Medals and, 396
New Jersey Alumni Association, 398
School of
Medicine, 406
Schools of Mines, Engineering, and
Chemistry, 408
Probation, Admission on
Barnard, 311
Columbia College, 175
Professional Schools, Options, in, for Col-
lege Students, 177
Professors, 1
Clinical, 1 1
Professorship, Theodore Roosevelt, 32
Program of Studies
Architecture, 292
Barnard, 312
Columbia College, 175
Design, 298
Law, 194
Music, 296
Proudfit Fellowship, in Letters, 391
in Medicine, 406
Psychology, and Division of Philosophy,
Courses in, 132
Public Law and Jurisprudence, Depart-
ment of, 35
Public Lectures in French, 147
in German, 92
in Indo-Iranian Languages, 122
Public Worship, 39
Publications of the University, 416-418
Columbia University Press, 418
Contributions and Serial Studies,
418-423
Journals, 423
Official, 416
Student, 420
Pulitzer Scholarships. 395
School of Journalism. 24
Purb Science, School of, 23, 256-259
Regulations for University De-
grees under, 166-169
Purposes of Law School, 193
Quarterly, Columbia University, 423
Regents of the University of the State'of
New York, 21
Register of Students, Architecture, 302-
304
Barnard College, 315-323
Columbia College, 181-192
Fine Arts, 302-305
Law, 199-203
Medicine, 215-221
Mines, Engineering, and Chem-
istry, 236-248
Music, 304-305
Pharmacy, College of, 358-362
Political Science, Philosophy,
and Pure Science, 260-286
TeachersJCollege, 332-353
Registrar, Offices of, 26
Registration, 26
Summer Session, 365
Regulations, Fellowships, and Scholar-
ships, 386
General, 26
Special, Pure Science. 258
University Degrees. 164-170
Relations with other Institutions, 32-34
Religion, Philosophy of. See Philosophy.
Religious Work, Public Worship and, 39
Requirements, Definitions of (Entrance
Examinations), 158
Residence Halls, 37
for Women, 38
Rhetoric and English Composition. See
English.
Richard Butler Scholarship, 395
Rockefeller Institute, 34
Roman Law, Courses in, 106
Romance Languages and Literatures,
Department of, 143
Club, 147
Philology, Courses in, 146
Roosevelt, Theodore, Professorship, 32
Rules Governing Students, Mines, En-
gineering, and Chemistry, 226
Rumanian, Course in. 146
St. Joseph's Theological Seminary, 33
St. Paul's Chapel, 39
Sanitary Engineering, 64
Sanskrit. See Indo-Iranian Languages.
Scandinavian Languages, Courses in, 91
Schermerhorn Scholarships, 401
Schiff Fellowship, 392
Scholars. See Scholarships.
Scholarships, 386 77.
Alonzo Clark, 406
Alumni Association, 401
Alumni Competitive, 399
Annual, 396
Barnard College, 411
Competitive, 412
Beck, 401
Beck Prize, 405
Benefactors, 401, 404, 408
Brooklyn, 400
Barnard, 411
Butler Richard, 395
Campbell, 400
Columbia College, 400
Class of '48, 401
Competitive, 399
Curtis University, 394
Faculty, 400, 404. 407, 408
Foundations of, 393
Harper, 399
Harsen, 407
Hewitt, 399
John D. Jones, 395
Kaufmann, Jessfe, 412
Marcus Daly in Mining Engineer-
ing, 408
Moffat, 401
Non-competitive, Barnard, 412
INDEX
447
Scholarships — Continued
President's University, 394
Pulitzer, 395
Lucille, 412
Schermerhorn, 401
School of Architecture, 409
L:iw, 404
Medicine. 407
Schools of Mines, Chemistry, and
Engineering, 408
Society for the Promotion of
Religion and Learning, 401
Stuart, 40 1
Teachers College, 413
Trustees' Competitive, 412
University, 393
University for Women, 395
Vanderbilt, 408
School of Architecture, 46, 290-395
Chemistry, Engineering, and,
24, 222
Design, 297-301
Engineering and Chemistry,
v 24
Journalism, 24
Law, 24. 193-203
Medicine, 24, 204-221
Mines, 24
Music, 295-297
Philosophy, 253-255
Political Science, 249-252
Pure Science, 256-259
Schools and Faculties, 22
Schools of Mines, Engineering, and Chem-
istry, 222-248
Organization by, 21-24
Teachers College Preparatory, 327
Schurz, Carl, Fellowship, 93, 392
Library Fund, 93
Science. See Applied Science, Political
Science, and Pure Science.
Science of Language, Courses in, 122
Seminaries, Theological, 32
Seminars. See Departments of Instruc-
tion.
Political Science, 251
Semitic Languages. Department of, 122
Serial Studies and Contributions from
the University, 418
Session, Summer. See Summer.
Shopwork, Courses in, 148
Shopwork, Entrance Requirement in, 162
Skiagraphy. See Pathology.
Sloane Maternity Hospital, 206
Smith, George W., Scholarship, 412
Smith, Joseph Mather, Prize, 407
Social Economy. Courses in, 74
Social Science, Economics and, Depart-
ment of, 72
Society for Promoting Religion and
Learning, Scholarships, 401
Sociology, Courses in. 74
Sons of the Revolution Medal, 396
Spanish, Courses in, 146
Entrance Requirement in, 162
Special Courses. See Non-Matriculated
Students.
Fees, Mines, Engineering, and
Chemistry. See Fees.
Medic ne. See Fees.
Fellowships, 388
Funds, 429-436
Lecturers, 1907—08, n
Regulations, Pure Science, 258
Speyer School, 329, 331
Squires, Grant, Prize, 397
Statistics, Courses in, 74
Stevens Triennial Prize, 407
Stuart Scholarships, 401
Students, Committee on Employment for,
30 17
Expenses, 30
( h-gunizations, 39
Publications, 420
Register of, Mines, Engineering,
and Chemistry, 236-248
Architecture, 302-304
Barnard College, 315-323
Columbia College, 181-192
Pine Arts, 302-305
Law, 199-203
Medicine, 215-221
Music, 304-305
Pharmacy, College of, 358-
362
Political Science, Philoso-
phy, and Pure Science,
260-286
Rules Governing Mines, En-
gineering and Chemis-
try, 226
Teachers College, 332-353
Studies, Elective College, 177
Prescribed, College, 176
Studies, Program of, Architecture, 292
Barnard, 312
Studies, Program of, Columbia College, 175
Design, 298
Law, 194
Music, 296
Studio Work, 300
Subjects, Entrance Examination, 158
For University Degrees, 164
Submission of Note-books, etc., 158
Summary of Officers, 439
Students, 439
Summer Courses in Medicine, 214
in Geodesy, 49
in Geology, 87
in Metallurgy, 112
in Mining, 115
in Surveying, 64
Summer Session, 25, 363-365
Administrative Board, xvi, 363
in Medicine, 365
Summer Work, in Mining, Engineering,
and Chemistry, 227
Fees, 29, 30
Surgeons, College of Physicians and, 24
Surgery, Department ot, 148
Surveying, Summer Courses in, 64
Fees, 29
Syriac, Courses in, 124
Table of Contents, iii
Teachers College, 24, 324-353
Award of Diplomas, 400
Fellows and Graduate Scholars,
413
Publications, 417
Teachers College Schools, 327
Teaching Extension. See Extension.
Teaching Staff, Members of Faculties and,
1—20
Theodore Roosevelt Professorship, 32
Theological Seminaries, Privileges, 34
Therapeutics, Pharmacology, and Materia
Medica, Department of, 128
Toppan Prize, 398
Treasurer, xi
Trustees, xi
Barnard College, 306
College of Pharmacy, 354
448
INDEX
Trustees — Continued
Committees, xii
Barnard College, 306
Competitive Scholarships (Bar-
nard). 412
Teachers College. 324
University Press, 418
Tuition Fees, 27
Turkish, Course in, 124
Tutors, is
Tyndall Fellowship, 388
Undergraduate Scholars, Teachers Col-
lege, 414
Union Theological Seminary, 33
Courses at. 99
University. The (General Statement),i3 2
University Bibliography, 416-428
Commons, 37
Counci', xii, 22
Degrees, 371
Fellows, 387
Fellowships, 386
Press, 418
Publications, 416-418
Quarterly, The Columbia, 422
Scholars, 394
Scholarships, 393
President's, 394
for Women, 394
Vanderbilt Clinic, 2c6
Clinical Assistants at, 18
Vanderbilt Scholarships, 408
Whittier Hall, 38
Withdrawal, 27
Women, University Scholarships for, 394
Worship, Public, 39
Yale University, Co-operation with, 24, 34,
251
Young Men's Christian Association, 39
Zoological Garden, 34
Zoology, Department of, 150
Entrance Requirement in, 163
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
B. ='3arnard College.
East. =East Hall.
E. H.=Earl Hall.
E. =Engineering.
F. =Fayerweather.
Gym. =Gymnasium.
Hm. = Hamilton.
H. M. S.=Horace Mann School.
Hv. = Havemeyer.
L. = Library.
M.=School of Mines.
P. & S.=Colk-ge of Physi-
cians and Surgeons.
Phar. =College of Pharmacy.
S. =Sch>:rmerhorn.
S. M. H.=Sloane Maternity Hos-
pital.
Sp. S.=Speyer School.
T.=Teachers College.
U.=University.
V. C.=Vanderbilt Clinic.
\V.=\Vest.
NAME
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
Aobe, R. Clin. Lect.
P. & s.
13 W. 50
Abbott, A. Tr.
H. M. S.
545 W. 148
Abbott, Julia W. Tutor
T.
1230 Amsterdam ave,
Abbott, N. Prof.
Tu. F. 3-4
305 L.
515 W. 124
Adier, F. Prof.
152 W. 77
Agger, E. E. Lect.
M. W. 9-10
403 W.
237 E. 104
Aldrich, J. Clin. Asst.
V. C.
164 W. 81
Allen, D. G. Asst.
P. & s.
131 E. 66
Anderson, Man- P. Tr.
H. M. S-
435 W. 123
Andrews, B. R. Sec. Depts.
Dora.
Econ.
T.
611 W. 135
Anthony, Kate S. Tr.
H. M. S-
2337 Broadway
Arendt, M. Instr.
Tu. 10-11;
Th. 10-12
503 E.
65 Central Pk. W.
Arnold, M. L. Asst.
607 F.
Hartley Hall
Arnold, W. W. Tr.
H. M. S.
326 W. 85
Astle, C. J. Clin. Asst.
V. C.
149 W. 62
Atwood, C.E., M.D. Clin.
Asst.
V. C.
14 E. 60
Ayer, J. C. Instr.
P. & S.
31 W. 36
Bacon, Georgia F. Tr.
Bacon, G. Prof.
Bagley, G. J. Sec. Gym.
Bagster-Collins, E. W. Adj. Prof.
Bailey, F. R. Adj. Prof.
Bailev, P. Adj. Prof.
Baker, C. M. Tr.
Baker, F. T. Prof.
Baker, G. H. Emer. Lib.
Baker, H. T. Sec. Earl Hall
Baker, Helen B. Tr.
M. 11-11:30;
W. 4-4:30
M. W. S.
9:30-10
M.-F. 9-12; 3
S. 9-12
-6
H. M. S. 44 Irving PI.
P. & S. 47 W. 54
Gym. Rahway, X. J.
231 T. Montrose, N. Y.
P. &. S. 1 1 65 E. Jersey,
Elizabeth, N. J.
P. & S. 52 W. 53
H. M. S. 157 W. 105
323 T. Park Hill,
Yonkers, N. Y.
294 Manhattan ave.
E. H. 509 W. 140
H. M. S. 140 W. 87
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
NAME
Baldwin, Elizabeth G. Lib. T. C.
Ball, A. B. Emer. Prof.
Ballard, C. W. Asst.
Bandelier, A. F. Lect.
Banker, C. E. Asst.
Bargy, H. Instr.
Barnes, G. E. Clin. Asst.
Barnum, Edith C. Tr.
Barrows, Anna, Instr.
Bany, T. J. Clin. Asst.
Baruch, S. Prof.
Bastedo, W. A. Instr. and Asst.
Batchelder, Evelyn Tr.
Batchelder, Mildred I. Tr.
Bates, E. S. Tutor
Bayles, G. J. Lect.
Beans, H. T. Tutor
Beard, C. A. Adj. Prof.
Bechert, A. O. Tutor
Becker, F. C. Asst.
Becker, H. C. Clin. Asst.
Bement, Alon, Instr.
Benns, C. P. Instr.
Benton, Eliza, Tutor
Berg, H. W. Instr.
Berg, W. N. Tutor
Berger, Jane, Asst. Sec.
Berkey, C. P. Instr.
Bigelow, M. A. Prof.
Bigongiari, D. Lect.
Bikle, C. E. Adj. Prof.
Bingham, A. W. Dera.
Black, A. Adj. Prof.
Blake, J. A. Prof.
Blancard, W. Asst.
Blanchard, J. Asst.
Blodgett, F. J. Clin. Asst.
Bloom, I. Asst.
Blow, Susan E. Lect.
Boag, E. T. Asst. Reg.
Boas, F. Prof.
Bogert, M. T. Prof.
Bond, S. F. Asst.
Botsford, G. W. Adj. Prof.
Bovaird, D. Tutor
Boyesen, B. Asst.
Boynton, W. H. Asst.
Bradley, W. L. Clin. Asst.
OFFICE HOURS
RESIDENCE
Daily 11-12
3i7 T.
469 Main,
E. Orange, N. J.
42 W. 36
Phar.
115 W. 68
P. & S.
148 W. 131
M. W. 2
305 W.
628 W. 139
V. c.
119 W. 43
H. M. S.
151 W. 105
T.
349 W. 85
V. C.
137 E. 49
P. & S.
Hotel Majestic
P. & S.
56 W. 58
H. M. S.
417 W. 118
H. M. S.
417 W. 118
608 Hm.
521 W. 135
Tu. F. 4
405 L.
Orange, N. J.
Tu. 11-12
512 Hv.
419 W. 118
M. W. 1 130-3
310 E.
430 W. 118
M. 3; Th. 1
113 B.
119 Jefferson, Bklyn.
F. io-n
419 L.
Livingston Hall
V. C.
112 W. 104
T.
M. 1-2
125 T.
416 W. 118
T.
510 W. 124
P. & S.
923 Madison ave.
P. & S.
73 W. 118
T.
121 3 Amsterdam ave.
Tu. Th. 9- 1 1
302 S.
206 W. 140
Tu. F. 10:30
301 T.
611 W. in
W. 1-2
H. M. S.
545 W. 148
P. & S.
266 W. 88
Tu. 11-12;
Th. F. io-ii
408 E.
521 W. 150
P. & S.
601 Madison ave.
P. & S.
137H Warburton ave.,
Yonkers, N. Y.
F. 11-12
607 F.
Livingston Hall
V. C.
140 W. 72
Gym.
61 E. 3
T.
M.-F. 10-5;
S. 10-4:30
P. & S.
3 Lenox ave.,
White Plains, N. Y.
W. F. 10
405 S.
Grantwood, N. J.
M.-F. 2-4
408 Hv.
422 W. 154
M.W.F. 8:30-9
707 Hm.
M. 11-11:50
109 L.
28 Urban,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
P. & S.
126 W. 58
T.
503 W. 121
V. C.
55 W. 75
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Braun, A. Clin. Asst.
Braun, \V. A. Instr.
Brewer, G. E. Prof.
Brewster, W. T. Prof, and Act'g
Dean, Barnard College
Briggs, Mrs. H. B. R. Asst.
Britton, N. L. Emer. Prof.
Broadhurst, Jean, Instr.
Brooks, Anna P. Asst.
Brooks, F. E. Tr.
Brooks, Mrs. Marie K. Tr.
Brouner, W. B. Clin. Asst.
Brown, H. C. Tutor
Brown, W. Asst.
Brugman, A. F. Clin. Asst.
Budington, Ethel H. Sup. Lib.
Bull, W. T. Emer. Prof.
Bumpus, H. C. Dir. Am. Mus.
Nat'l Hist.
Burdick, F. M. Prof.
Burgess, J. W. Prof, and Dean,
Sch. Pol. Sci.
Burr, W. H. Prof.
Burritt, B. B. Dir. in Sp. S.
Burton-Opitz, R. Adj. Prof.
Bush, W. T. Lect.
Butler, Eliza R. Tr.
Butler, N. M. Prest.
Cady, C. B. Lect.
Calhoun, Margaret, Asst.
Calhoun, Mary E. Tr.
Calkins, G. N. Prof.
Campbell, W. Adj. Prof.
Canfield, G. F. Prof.
Canfield, J. H. Lib.
Carpenter, G. R. Prof.
Carpenter, W. H. Prof.
Carr, M. L. Clin. Asst.
Carter, Mrs. A. E. Tr.
Cartwright, O. G. Tr.
Cash, S. L. Clin. Asst.
Cattell, J. McK. Prof.
Chaddock, R. E. Lect.
Chambers, P. F. Clin. Prof.
Chambers, V. J. Instr.
Chandler, C. F. Prof.
Chappell, W. F. Clin. Prof.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
V. c.
847 E. 163
M. 10; Th. 3
"3 B.
50 Morningside
ave. E.
P. & S.
61 W. 48
M.-F. 12:20-1
B.
628 W. 114
T.
515 VV. 138
New York Botanical
Garden, Bronx
T.
1230 Amsterdam ave.
T.
503 W. 121
H. M. S.
600 W. 114
H. M. S.
600 W. 114
V. C.
45 W. 9
W. 2-4;
Tu. Th. 3-4
417 L.
141 Engle,
Englewood, N. J.
M. W. F. 11-12
512 S.
Hartley Hall
V. C.
220 W. 139
L.
457 W. 123
35 W. 35
Tu. Th. 12:20-1
303 L-
633 W. 115
M.-Th. 3:30-5
404 L.
323 W. 57
401 E.
151 W. 74
Sp. S.
94 Lawrence
P. & S.
Palisade, N. J.
Tu. 3-4; W.4-5
420 L.
167 Joralemon, Bklyn.
H. M. S.
536 W. 114
M. Tu. Th. F.
10:30-12
213 L.
T.
T.
119 E. 30
H. M. S.
502 W. 113
•604 S.
M. W. 10-12
502 M.
Livingston Hall
Tu. Th. 9-10;
n-12
302 L.
346 W. 72
M.-F. 9:30-12
201 L.
244 W. 73
Tu. Th. io-n
610 Hm.
Tu. Th. 4
508 F.
207 W. 56
Tu. Th. 3-4
316 U.
253 W. 100
V. C.
353 W. 57
Sp. s.
449 W. 123
H. M. S.
Hartley Hall
V. C.
52 E. 31
412 s.
Garrison, N. Y.
M. W. 3:10-4
403 w.
Livingston Hall
P. & s.
49 W. 57
M.-F. 1-2
405 Hv.
527 W. 124
M. W. F. 12:20
-4
Tu. Th. 10-5
303 Hv.
51 E. 54
P. & s.
7E. 55
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Chesbrough, Mary D. Tr.
Church, E. C. Asst.
Clark, J. B. Prof.
Clark, J. E. Clin. Asst.
Clark, L. P. Clin. Asst.
Clarke, Sir C. Purdon, Dir. Met.
Mus. of Art.
Clarke, W. C. Instr.
Cleasby, Elizabeth, Tr.
Cleghorn, C. D. Clin. Asst.
Coblentz, V. Prof.
Coffin, Margaret, Asst.
Cohn, A. Prof.
Cole, F. N. Prof.
Cole, P. R. Lect.
Coley, W. B. Clin. Lect.
Coll, A. P. Clin. Asst.
Collins, H. D. Instr.
Colwell, Rachel H. Asst.
Cook, E. Clin. Asst.
Cooley, Anna M. Instr.
Cooley, W. F. Asst.
Cowan, J. A. Clin. Asst.
Cox, R. Asst. Instr.
Cragin, E. B. Prof.
Crampton, H. E. Prof.
Crane, W. R. Instr.
Crawford, Caroline, Instr.
Crocker, F. B. Prof.
Cunningham, R. H. Instr.
Curtis, C. C. Instr.
Curtis, E. Emer. Prof.
Curtis, J. G. Prof.
Curtis, Mary W. Asst.
Cushing, H. A. Prof.
Cussler, E. Asst.
Dade, C. T. Clin. Asst.
Daniell, Lucetta, Dir. T. C.
Danielson, C. S. Bursar
Darling, C. A. Asst.
Darrach, W. Dem. and Instr.
Davidson, H. S. Lect.
Davis, B. Instr.
Davis, F. Clin. Asst.
Davis, Martha G. Tr.
Dawkins, S. M. Dir. in Sp. S.
Day, Olive S. Tr.
Day, W. S. Lect.
Dean, B. Prof.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
H. M. S.
5OO W. 121
W. 4
402 E.
4 E. 130
M. W. i :30-2
204 W.
616 W. 113
V. C.
33 McKeel ave.,
Tarrytown, N. Y.
V. C.
23 W. 58
P. & s.
200 W. 56
H. M. S.
V. C.
312 W. 93
Phar.
115 W. 68
T.
515 W. in
M. W. io-n
309 W.
2018 Fifth ave.
W. 2-3
406 E.
T.
Livingston Hall
P. & S.
5 Park ave.
V. C.
153 Lexington are.
P. & S.
50 W. 55
T.
415 W. 118
V. C.
135 E. 37
T.
202 W. 79
M.-F. 11-12
419 L.
515 W. 134
V. C.
438 W. 44
P. & s.
47 W. 44
P. & s.
10 W. 50
M. 1-2
413 B.
20I W. 122
M. W. F. io-ii
408 M.
512 W. 124
T.
303 W. 78
Tu. Th. 11-12
503 E.
14 W. 45
P. & S.
238 W. 55
Tu.Th. io-n :30
2:30
502-3 s.
33 W. 69
P. & s.
327 W. 58
T.
M. W. F. io-ii
305 L.
37 Madison ave.
P. & S.
203 W. 54
V. c.
25 W. 50
M. Tu. W. 2-3 ;
Th. F. 10-12
108 T.
1230 Amsterdam av
M.-F. 9:30-3:30;
S. 9:30-12
205 E.
224 W. 121
M.-F. 9-12
504 S.
475 Manhattan ave.
P. & S.
107 W. 55
Tu. Th. 10-11
310 u.
125 W. 128
M. 1-5 ; Th. 1-4
210 F.
509 W. 124
V. C.
58 W. 47
H. M. S.
414 W. 118
Sp. s.
94 Lawrence
H. M. S.
Tu. Th. 11-12
408 F.
220 Hobart ave.,
Absent on leave
Summit, N. J.
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Dederer, Pauline H. Tutor
De Klyn, C. C. Clin. Asst.
Delafield, F. Emer. Prof.
Delano, \V. A. Assoc. Dir. of
Atelier
Devine, E. T. Prof.
Dewey, J. Prof.
Dickey, F. A. Sec. Com. on Em-
ployment for Students
Dickson, Lucy, Tr.
Diekman, G. C. Prof.
Dielinan, F. Prest. Nat'l Acad.
of Design
Ditman, N. E. Instr.
Dixon, G. S. Instr.
Dodge, R. E. Prof.
Dorr, G. H. Lect.
Dounce, J. W. Clin. Asst.
Dow, A. W. Prof.
Dow, E. L. Tutor
Dowd, C. N. Instr.
Downs, E. S. Tutor
Draper, W. K. Adj. Prof.
Dunning, W. A. Prof.
Dutton, S. T. Prof.
Earhart, Lida B. Instr.
Eastman, M. F. Asst.
Egbert, J. C. Prof.
Eichhorn, H. Clin. Asst.
Ellard, C. H. Tutor
Elliott, A. R. Emer. Prof.
Emerson, H. Dem. and Asst.
Epstein, S. Clin. Asst.
Erb, F. C. Sup. Lib.
Erb, F. W. Sup. Lib.
Evans, E. M. Tutor
Fackenthal, F. D. Chief Clerk
Falk, K. G. Tutor
Falk, M. S. Lect.
Farnsworth, C. H. Adj. Prof.
Farrand, L. Prof.
Farwell, H. W. Asst.
Ferguson, H. B. Asst. Sec. Coll.
of Phar.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
Tu. 12
420 B.
560 W. 113
V. c.
216 W. 102
5 W. 50
M. Th. 2-s
143 E. 39
Tu. Th. s
415 L.
501 W. 113
Tu. Th. 9 150-
10:30
416 L.
1700 Broadway
M.-F. 9-5;
S. 9-12
213 L.
503 W. 124
H. M. S.
499 W. 135
Phar.
115 W. 68
51 W. 10
P. & S.
839 Madison ave.
P. & S.
123 E. 74
W. Th. F. 9-10
203 T.
Washington, Conn.
S. 8:30-9
415 L.
308 W. 97
V. C.
320 Central Pk. W.
w. 3-4
43i T.
501 W. 120
P. & S.
49 W. 57
P. & S.
135 W. 73
Tu. 11-12.
Th. 12:20
508 E.
417 W. 120
P. & S.
121 E. 36
M. W. 3-3:30
710 Hm.
F. 12:20
403 L.
256 W. 57
M.-F. 12-1 ;
M. W. F. 3-4
H. M. S.
619 W. 114
T.
430 W. 118
M. W. F. 9-1 1
417 L.
M. W. F. 11-12
109 L.
425 W. 146
V. C.
67 Seventh
Tu. 11
512 Hv.
Great Neck, L. I.
Phar.
21st st. and Ave. A.
P. & S.
120 E. 62
V. c.
591 Lexington ave.
L.
520 W. 123
L.
520 W. 123
P. & S.
38 W. 48
M.-F. 9-5;
S. 9-12
213 L.
930 St. Mark's ave.,
Bklyn.
Tu. W. i-s
210 F.
1070 Madison ave.
401 E.
44 W. 53
Absent on leave
M. W. 4
513 s.
Bartow-on-Sound,
N. Y.
F. S. 1-5
210 F.
509 W. 124
M.-F. 9-5;
S. 9-12
Phar.
137 W. 69
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Fischer, C. S. Asst.
Fiske, T. S. Prof.
Fitz-Gerald, J. D., II, Instr.
Fletcher, J. B. Prof.
Flint, C. P. Instr.
Floyd, R. Lect. and Asst.
Foote, E. M. Instr.
Foote, F. S., Jr. Asst.
Forbes, C. Curator
Foster, N. B. Instr. and Asst.
Fotheringharn, Elizabeth R. Tr.
Fowler, S. W. Clin. Asst.
Fox, G. H. Clin. Asst.
Freese, Mrs. Cecile, Tr.
French, A. T. Tr.
Frink, C. A. Asst.
Frissell, L. F. Instr.
Frothingham, R. Instr.
Fullerton, G. S. Prof.
Fulmer, Grace, Instr.
Furst, C, Sec. Teachers College
Gallaudet, B. B. Adj. Prof, and
Clin. Lect. and Instr.
Gardner, H. R. Tr.
Garton, Harriet, Tr.
Geer, Mrs. Cora M. Sec. to Prin.
H. M. Elem. Sch.
George, Theodora, Registrar
Teachers College
Gerig, J. L. Lect.
Getman, F. H. Lect.
Gibney, V. P. Prof.
Giddincs, F. H. Prof.
Gies, W. J. Prof.
Gildersleeve, Virginia C. Tutor
Gill, J. G. Tutor
Gill. Laura D. Dean of Barnard
College
Gillette, C. Asst.
Gillmore, Mary B. Tr.
Glanton, Louise P. Tr.
Goetze, F. A. Dean Sch. App.
Sci. and Consulting Engineer
Gohdes, W. H. Tr.
Gold, J. D. Clin. Asst.
Goldthwair, Cora. Tr.
Goodfriend, N. Clin. Asst.
Goodhardt, S. P. Clin. Asst.
Goodnow, F. J. Prof.
Goodridge, F. G. Clin. Asst.
Goodridge, M. Asst.
OFFICE HOURS
Absent on leave
M. W. 1-2
Tu. Th. 1 130
Tu. Th. S. 9-10
M.-F. 10-5
OFFICE
P. & s.
306 w.
511 F.
P. & S.
P. & S.
P. & S.
407 E.
308 F.
P. & S.
H. M. S.
V. C.
V. C.
H. M. S.
H. M. S.
P. & S.
P. & S.
P. & S.
RESIDtNCE
Absent on leave
M. W. F. 3-5;
Tu.Th. S. 10-12 106 T.
144 E. 38
112 E. 22
107 W. 55
129 E. 60
136 W. 48
429 W. 117
164 St. Nicholas ave.
69 E. 54
1 Gramercy Pk.
155 W. 48
616 Madison ave.
353 W. 17
Hartley Hall
457 W. 144
113 E. 56
616 Madison ave.
503 W. 121
Lowerre Summit,
Yonkers, N. Y.
P. & S.
115 E. 16
H. M. S.
H. M. S.
515 W. in
H. M. S.
5681 Broadwav,
Kingsbridge
M.-F. 10-12;
2-4; S. 10-12
104 T.
523 W. 123
M.W.F. 12:20-1
B.
M. 11-12
205 F.
Stamford, Conn.
P. & S.
16 Park ave.
M. 3 130; F. 1 :30
408 L.
150 W. 79
P. & S.
437 W. 59
Absent on leave
W. F. 3-4
305 Hm.
521 W. 122
Absent on leave
P. & S.
4 E. 4.1
H. M. S.
415 W. 118
Sp. S.
94 Lawrence
M. W. F. 2-5
40 <; E.
411 W. 117
H. M. S.
Hartley Hall
V. C.
H. M. S.
506 W. 113
V. C.
243 E. 72
V. C.
123 E. 60
Absent on leave
V. C.
332 Lexington ave.
P. & S.
412 West End ave.
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Goodsell, Willystine, Instr.
Gorren, D. Asst,
Gotthcil, R. J. II. Prof.
Grabau, A. W. Prof.
Greenvvay, J. C. Asst.
Gregory, W. K. Lect
Gre'iff, V. R. Asst.
Grout, G. H. Clin. Asst.
Guernsey, R. Tutor
Haas, S. V. Asst.
Haeffen, Fanny J. Tr.
Hale, H. E. Dem.
Hall, E. J. Instr.
Hallock, W. Prof, and Dean
Sch. Pure Sci.
Hamlin, A. D. F. Prof.
Hanckel, Mary B. Instr.
Harcourt, Nellie, Tr.
HaTpham, Flora E. Computer
Harriman, C. A. Instr.
Harrington, T. H. Tutor
Hart, T. S. Instr.
Hartley, F. Prof, and Instr.
Hartwell, G. W. Lect.
Haskell, Alice, Asst.
Hastings, T. Dir. of Atelier
Hauch, E. F. Tr.
Haviland, C. F. Clin. Asst.
Hawkes, F. Instr.
Hawley, Harriet, Sec. to Dean,
Teachers College
Hayden, J. R. Prof.
Hayes, C. H. Lect.
Hayt, E. K. Asst. Bursar
Hazen, T. E. Instr.
Kealy, W. P. Instr.
Hedges, Anna B. Asst.
Herrman, C. Clin. Asst.
Herter, C. A. Prof.
Hervey, W. A. Adj. Prof.
Heuser, F. W. J. Tutor
Higgins, E. Asst.
Hill, Patty S. Instr.
Hirst, Gertrude M. Instr.
Hirth, F. Prof.
Hiss, P. H., Jr. Prof.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
T.
43I W. 121
M.-F. 2-4
509 E.
429 W. 117
Tu. F. 3
309 U.
63 W. 85
Tu. Th. 11-12
101 S.
519 W. 152
P. & S.
667 Madison ave.
2313 Loring PI.
Daily 1-5
201 E.
166 W. 79
V. C.
181 W. 75
M. W. 3-3 :30
508 Hm.
519 W. 121
P. & S.
666 West End ave.
H. M. S.
417 W. 120
P. & S.
752 West End ave,
Daily 9-10
206 Hv.
520 W. 122
M. W. F. 11:30 406 F.
M. W. F. 12 304 E.
M. F. 10-11;
3609 Broadway
Tu. Th. 2-3
607 Hv.
105 Morningside
ave. E.
T.
541 W. 123
Sp. S.
94 Lawrence
602 F.
317 W. 119
605 Hv.
Tu. Th. 10-11
604 E.
Doris St., Bronx
P. & s.
130 W. 59
P. & s.
61 W. 49
Tu. Th. 9-1 1
309 Hm.
Livingston Hall
Th. 11-12
136 B.
607 W. 116
28 E. 41
H. M. S.
Livingston Hall
V. C.
Manhattan State
Hospital, Ward's
Island
P. & s.
42 E. 26
T.
1230 Amsterdam ave.
P. & s.
121 W. 55
M. W. 2:15
714 Hm.
Hartley Hall
M.-F. 10-1; 2-5;
S. 10-1
P. & S.
104 W. 128
W. 9
320 B.
Livingston Hall
P. & s.
221 W. 57
T.
402 W. 124
V. C.
250 W. 88
P. & s.
819 Madison ave.
M. W. F. 2;
Tu. Th. 10
407 Hm.
607 W. 138
M. n ; Th. 10
403 Hm.
239 S. Fifth ave.,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
M.-F. 1-2
409 Hv.
Livingston Hall
T.
515 W. 122
W. 10
212 B.
504 W. 122
Th. n
305 U.
501 W. 113
P. & s.
200 Columbia
Heights, Bklyn.
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Hodenpyl, E. Adj. Prof.
Hodge, Rev. R. M. Lect.
Hodgson, J. H. P. Clin. Asst.
Hoffman, A. Asst.
Holcomb, H. V. Asst.
Holden, W. A. Instr.
Hollingsworth, H. L. Asst.
Holm, G. T. Asst.
Holt, L. E. Prof.
Hotchkiss, Caroline W. Tr.
Hotchkiss, L. W. Clin. Lect. and
Instr.
Howe, H. M. Prof.
Howland, J. Instr.
Hubbard, Grace A. Adj. Prof.
HubbarH, S. D. Clin. Asst.
Huber, F. Prof.
Humphries, H. R. Clin. Asst.
Hunt, E. L. Instr.
Huntington, G. S. Prof.
Hurd, Florence L. Sec. Manual
Tr. Dept. T. C.
Hutchinson, Mary E. Prin. Tr.
Sch. Sloane Maternity Hosp'l
Huttmann, Maude A. Lect.
Hutton, F. R. Emer. Prof.
Hyde, Mary B. Instr.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
P. & s.
37 E. 63
T.
552 W. 113
V. C.
29 Washington Sq.
405 Hv.
217 Hewes, Bklyn.
P. & S.
147 E. 38
P. & s.
43 W. 48
M.-F. i-2
511 s.
520 W. 123
Gym.
Glenwood ave.,
Edgewater, N. J
P. & s.
14 w. 55
H. M. S.
502 W. 113
P. & S.
59 W. 48
F. 3-4
512 M.
27 W. 73
P. & S.
49 E. 53
Th. 12:20-1
209 B.
618 W. 114
V. C.
143 W. 103
P. & s.
209 E. 17
V. c.
219 Alexander ave.
P. & s.
54 W. 50
P. & s.
Scarsdale, N. Y.
T.
417 W. 118
S. M. H.
457 W. 59
Tu.3-4; Th.4-5
340 B.
70 Morningside W.
T.
416 W. 118
Inglis, A. J. Tr.
Irving, P. Asst.
Isaacs, C. A. Asst.
M.-F. 9-12
H. M. S. Hartley Hall
P. & S. 221 W. 57
505 F. Livingston Hall
Jackson, A. V. W. Prof.
Jackson, F. W. Prof.
Jackson, G. T. Instr.
Jackson, J. A. Clin. Asst.
Jacobi, A. Emer. Prof.
Jacoby, H. Prof.
Jaeger, C. H. Instr.
James, Clara C. Tr.
James, W. B. Prof.
James, W. Non-resident Lect.
Jessup, D. S. D. Asst. and Univ.
Medical Visitor
Jewell, Isabella E. Asst.
Johnson, Elizabeth, Tr.
Johnson, H. Prof.
Jordan, D. Adj. Prof.
Jouet, C. H. Tutor
Julien, A. A. Curator
W. 3
306 U.
10 Highland PL,
Yonkers, N. Y.
P. & S.
555 Madison ave.
P. & S.
15 E. 29
V. C.
344 W. 85
19 E. 47
M. W. 10- 1 1
610 F.
333 W. 76
P. & S.
24 W. 59
Sp. s.
509 W. 112
P. & s.
17 W. 54
Cambridge, Mass,
Daily 5-6
301 W. 108
T.
431 W. 121
Sp. s.
94 Lawrence
W. F. 10:45-
11:30
Tu. Th. 10
Tu. W. 10-12
M.-F. 10-12
320 T. 620 W. 116
311 Hm. 419 W. 115
505 Hv.
303 S. 505 W. 124
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
NAME
OFPICB HOURS
OKIMCE
IBNCB
Kaliski, D. Clin. Asst.
V. c.
103 E. 103
Kane, R. A. Tr.
H. M. S.
422 W. 115
Kasner, E. Adj. Prof.
Tu. Th. io-ii
309 B.
22 W. 119
Kassell, L. Asst.
P. & S.
Hotel Majestic
Keator, H. M. Dem.
P. & S.
107 E. 70
Keller, Eleanor, Tutor
435 B.
417 W. 114
Kemp, J. F. Prof.
Tu. Th. i :3c-
2:30
403 s.
211 W. 139
Kent, J. M. Asst.
P. & S.
The Amidon, B'way
and 83
Kenyon, J. H. Asst. Instr.
P. & s.
37 W. 71
Keppel, F. P. Sec.
M.-F. 10-12;
2-4; S. 10-12
213 L.
142 E. 18
Kern, E. F. Tutor
M. Tu. Th. F.
2-5
404 M.
Livingston Hall
Keyes, Maud V. Tr.
H. M. S.
499 W. 135
Keyser, C. J. Prof.
M. W. F. 9:30
506 Hm.
74 W. 103
Kinne, Helen, Prof.
Tu. Th. 2-3 ;
F. 11-12
T.
8 Morningside ave. E.
Kinnicutt, F. P. Prof.
P. & S.
39 E. 35
Kirchwey, Clara B. Instr.
T.
908 St. Nicholas ave.
Kirchwey, G. W. Prof, and
Dean Sch. of Law
M. W. F. 11:30-
12:30
206 L.
908 St. Nicholas ave.
Kirchwey, Mary F. Tr.
H. M. S.
908 St. Nicholas ave.
Kirk, E. Asst.
W. F. 1-2
101 S.
528 W. 123
Knapp, A. H. Prof.
P. & S.
26 W. 40
Knapp, C. Prof.
M. W. Th. F. 10
114 B.
1737 Sedgwick ave.
Knapp, C. B. Prof.
Phar.
60 W. 76
Knapp, H. Emer. Prof.
26 W. 40
Krapp, G. P. Adj. Prof.
M. W. 11-12;
F. 2-3
507 F.
157 W. 105
Krathwohl, W. C. Tutor
M. W. F. 11-12
309 B.
522 W. 123
Kress, M. K. Adj. Prof.
M.-F. 2-4:30
610 Hv.
272 W. 107
Kress, 0. Tutor
303 Hv.
438 W. 116
Kunze, E. J. Tutor
Tu. Th. S. 2-4
506 E.
Livingston Hall
Kurtz, E. L. Instr.
M. W. F. io-ii
403 M.
Livingston Hall
La Fetra, L. E. Instr.
P. & S.
58 W. 58
Lambert, A. Van S. Instr.
P. & S.
29 W. 36
Lambert, S. W. Prof, and Dean
Sch. of Medicine
M. Tu. Th.
F. S. 11
P. & S.
130 E. 35
Lamme, M. A. Tutor
M.-F. 3-4
106 S.
St. Francis Court, 135
and Riverside Dr.
Langford, Grace, Asst.
B.
91 Columbia Heights,
Bklyn.
Langzett'el, Mrs. Marion B. B.
Lect.
T.
414 W. 118
Larkin, J. H. Adj. Prof.
P. & S.
601 W. 135
Latham, Azubah J. Lect.
T.
503 W. 121
Latham, Helen, Instr.
T.
503 W. 121
Latham, Marion E. Tutor
M. 10-12
B.
417 W. 148
Laufer, B. Lect.
Th. 11-12
305 U.
215 W. 108
Lawrence, W. W. Adj. Prof.
W. F. 3-4
507 F.
157 W. 105
Lawson, C. F. Asst.
IO
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Learning, E. Instr.
Lee, F. S. Prof.
Lefferts, G. M. Emer. Prof.
Leggett, N. B. Clin. Asst.
Lemon, Margaret A. Tr.
Leonhard, K. G. R. Prof.
Leshure, J. Clin. Asst.
Leslie, F. A. Asst.
Levy, D. H. Clin. Asst.
Lewis, Mary H. Tr.
Lewis, R., jr. Instr.
Liggett, Mrs. N. W. Bursar,
Barnard College
Lindsay, S. M. Prof.
Ling, G. H. Instr.
Lockwood, G. R. Adj. Prof.
Lodge, G. Prof.
Loiseaux, L. A. Adj. Prof.
Lord, H. G Prof.
Lovejoy, A. O. Lect.
Lovell, E. B. Prof.
Lucke, C. E. Adj. Prof.
Luquer, L. Mel. Adj. Prof.
McBurney, C. Emer. Prof.
McCastline, W. H. Asst. Dir.
Phys. Educ.
McConnell, R. H. Asst.
McCosh, A. T- Prof.
McCrea, N. G Prof.
McCurdv, Delia, Tr.
McDonald, E. Clin. Asst.
McEntee, E. J. Clin. Asst.
McFarland, G. H., Jr. Instr.
McGregor, J. H. Adj. Prof.
McKim, C. F. Dir. of Atelier
McLane, J. W. Emer. Prof.
McMahon, Kate, Instr.
McMurrv, F. M. Prof.
McWhood, L. B. Adj. Prof.
McWilliams, C. A. Instr.
MacAlarney, Emma L. Tr.
Macgregor, J. S. Asst.
Maclay, J. Prof.
MacNary, E. E. Tr.
Macumber, J. L. Clin. Asst.
MacVannel, J. A. Prof.
Main, T. F. Sec. Coll. of Phar-
macy
Maltby, Margaret E. Adj. Prof.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RFSIDEN'CE
P. & s.
437 W. 59
P. & s.
125 E. 65
212 Madison ave.
V. c.
103 W. 78
Sp. s.
1230 Amsterdam
ave.
Tu. W. F. ii-i3
407 L.
Hotel Majestic
V. c.
423 Convent ave.
Phar.
115 W. 68
V. C.
134 W. 104
H. M. S.
P. & S.
48 W. 40
M.-F. 10-4;
S. 10-12
B.
Tu. Th. 4-5
203 W.
Englewood, N. J.
M. W. io-ii
211 Hm.
510 W. 124
P. & S.
18 E. 52
M. W. 3 :30-4:30
228 T.
604 W. 112
M. W. F. 10;
12-1
310 Hm.
507 Wi 124
M. W. F. 10-11
615 Hm.
623 W. 113
M. Tu. W. F.
10-10:30
420 L.
Livingston Hall
Tu. 11-12;
Th. 8:30-10
409 E.
235 W. 102
Dailv 1-2
304 E.
544 W. 142
Tu. W. 2
306 S.
T.
321 W. 80
3S E. 31
P. & S.
42 W. 97
P. & S.
16 E. 54
M. W. 10-10:30
510 Hm.
417 W. 118
H. M. S.
419 W. 121
V. C.
13 W. 86
V. C.
93 Lee ave., Bklyn.
S. M. H.
447. W. 59
M. W. 11-12
610 S.
Livingston Hal!
160 Fifth ave.
51 W. 38
T.
1230 Amsterdam
ave.
Absent on leave
W. 3
606 M.
511 W. 112
P. & S.
112 W. 55
H. M. S.
430 W. 118
308 E.
M. W. 1 =30-2
209 Hm.
Pleasantville, N.
Y.
H. M. S.
107 Morningside
ave.
V. C.
249 Washington
Bklyn.
ave.r
S. 10-12
112 T.
411 W. 115
M.-F. 9-12:30;
1 :30-5 S. 9-12 Phar.
VV. 11-12 240 B.
Montclair, N. J.
3609 Broadway
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
I I
NAME
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
Mansfield, W. Act'g Prof.
Phar.
iiS W. 68
March, Maud, Inst r.
T.
82 Morningside ave.
Markham, C. B. A:->t.
Marple, C. F. Instr.
T.
350 W. 120
Marshall, Florence M. Tr.
H. M. S.
430 W. 118
Martin, W. Instr.
P. & S.
25 W. 50
Mason, H. H. Asst.
P. & S.
9 W. 35
Mathews, F. S. Instr.
P. & S.
62 W. 50
Matthews, B. Prof.
Tu. Th. 3 ;
S. 945
502 F.
681 West End ave.
Maury, J. W. D. Instr.
P. & S.
264 YV. 57
Maxson, A. R. Tutor
212 Hm.
May, W. R. Asst.
P. & S.
4 E. 41
Mayer, R. E. Adj. Prof.
M. W. 9- 1 1
602 E.
520 W. 122
Meara, F. S. Tutor
P. & S.
400 West End ave.
Meeker, H. D. Clin. Asst.
V. c.
166 W. 72
Menut, Eugenie, Tr.
H. M. S.
560 Park ave.
Merrill, Valeria I. Lib. H. M. S.
H. M. S.
1230 Amsterdam ave.
Metzger, F. J. Instr.
Tu. Th. 11;
F. 10
507 Hv.
527 W. 124
Meyer, Anna E. H. Sec. of Bar-
nard College
M.-F. 10-12;
2-4; S. 10-12
B.
15 Cedar PI.,
Yonkers, N. Y.
Meylan, G. L. Adj. Prof, and
Med. Dir. Gym.
M. F. 2-4;
Tu.W.Th. 3-
4:30; S. 11-12
Gym.
468 W. 141
Michaelis, A. Clin. Asst.
V.' C.
173 E. 95
Miller, A. M., Instr.
P. & S.
142 S. 10,
Newark, N. J.
Miller, D. S. Prof.
W. io-n
614 Hm.
Miller. E. Clin. Asst.
V. C.
151 W. 95
Miller, Edyth, Sec. Educ. Mu-
seum, T. C.
T.
102 W. 93
Miller, Ethelwyn, Tr.
H. M. S.
519 W. 121
Miller, T- A. Instr.
P. & S.
550 Park ave.
Miller, S. 0. Tutor
M.-F. 1-4
603 E.
West Nyack, N. Y.
Millis, T. F. Tr.
H. M. S.
557 W. 124
Mitchell, K. B. Adj. Prof.
Tu. Th. 10-11
304 Hm.
80 Washington Sq.
Mitchell, S. A. Instr.
M. W. 10- 1 1
606 F.
317 W. 121
Monroe, P. Prof.
Absent on leave
first half-year
Montague, W. P. Adj. Prof.
W. 1 :30-2
416 L.
W. 3 :io-4
335 B.
347 W. 123
Moore, H. L. Prof.
M. W. 1
202 W.
501 W. 120
Moore, J. B. Prof.
M. W. F. 9-4
401 L.
267 W. 73
Morgan, J. L. R. Prof.
Daily 10-11
411 Hv.
Morgan, T. H. Prof.
613 s.
Morrill, C. V., Jr. Asst.
602 S.
430 W. 118
Morrison, C. E. Tutor
M. W. F. 9-12
401 E.
135 Hamilton PL
Morse, L. B. Asst.
524 W. 123
Moses, A. J. Prof.
M.-F. 4-5
307 S.
361 1 Broadway
Muller, H. F. Tutor
Tu. Th. 11-12
114 B.
Munroe, H. S. Prof.
W. F. 11
407 M.
501 W. 120
12
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Neish, A. C. Tutor
Neitz, J. D. Tr.
Nelson, C. A. Head Reference
Librarian
Nelson, F. A. Lect.
Nichols, E. F. Prof.
Nisselson, M. Clin. Asst.
Norrie, Van H. Adj. Prof.
Norris, H. L. Supt. of Buildings
and Grounds
Norsworthy, Naomi, Instr.
Nourse, Lilla A. Tr.
Noyes, W. H. Instr.
Nutting, Mary A. Prof.
Oastler, F. R. Clin. Lect. and
Instr.
Odell, G. C. D. Prof.
Oehler, J. Adj. Prof.
Oertel, H. Dem.
Offerhaus, C. Asst.
Ogilvie, Ida H. Tutor
Olcott, G. N. Adj. Prof.
Oldham, Rev. G. A. Act'g Chap-
plain
O'Neil, Elizabeth B. Sec. Publi-
cation Bureau, T. C.
Opdyke, Agnes, Registrar of
Barnard College
Ordronaux, J. Emer. Prof.
Osborn, H. F. Prof.
Osburn, R. C. Instr.
Osgood, C. Clin. Asst.
Osgood, H. L. Prof.
Page, C. H. Adj. Prof.
Painter, H. M. Prof.
Palmer, Luella A. Tr.
Parker, H. C. Adj. Prof.
Parker, W. B. Lect.
Parr, H. L. Instr.
Patterson, H. S. Instr.
Peabody, Mary G. Tr.
Pearson, H. C. Princ.
Elem. Sch.
Peck, H. T. Prof.
Peele, R. Prof.
H. M.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIDENCE
Daily 10-12
418 Hv.
H. M. S.
203 W. 113
L.
400 W. 153
603 Hv.
408 F.
V. C.
21 E. 112
P. & S.
21 W. 37
M.-F. 10-11
no L.
Livingston Hall
T.
557 W. 124
H. M. S.
541 W. 123
T.
618 W. 114
Tu. Th. 2-3
553 T.
417 W. 118
P. & S.
126 W. 59
W. 3 ; F. 10:30
611 Hm.
44 W. 44
Phar.
Carlstadt, N. J.
P. & S.
30 W. 44
Tu. 2-4
508 M.
322 W. 115
Tu. 11-12
214 B.
Hotel Ansonia
M. W. 12:20
109 L.
438 W. 116
M-F.
61 W. 55
12:15-12:45
Chapel
T.
526 W. 114
M.-F. 10-12;
2:30-4; S. 10-12
B.
420 W. 118
30 Broad
Tu.
608 S.
850 Madison ave.
Tu. Th.F. 10-12
409 B.
510 W. 124
V. C.
58 Central Park W.
Tu. Th. 4:30
320 u.
526 W. 150
M. W. 10
308 Hm.
235 W. 109
P. & S.
62 W. 55
Sp. s.
235 E. 18
Tu. Th. 3-5
410 F.
• 21 Fort Greene PI.,
Bklyn.
M. 1.45
604 Hm.
2333 Broadway
M.-S. 1-4;
F. 11-12
207 E.
Yonkers, N. Y.
P. & S.
51 W. 58
H. M. S.
416 W. ;i8
M. Tu. Th. 2-3
W. 8:45-10
501 W. 120
W. 3:30-4:30
F. 11-12
301 E.
500 W. 121
M. W. F. 10- 1 1
405 M.
351 W. 114
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
'3
Pegram, G. B. Instr.
Pel lew, C. E. Adj. Prof.
Perrv, E. D. Prof, and Dean
Sch. of Phil.
Peterson, F. Prof.
Pfister, J. C. Adj. Prof.
Pomeroy, C. H. Bursar of Teach-
ers College
Pool, E. H. Instr.
Poor, C. L. Prof.
Poore, C. T. Clin. Lect.
Porterfield, A. W. Tutor
Potter, N. B. Instr.
Powell, T. R. Lect.
Pratt, Isabelle L. Sec. Appoint-
ment Com. T. C.
Pratt, Marion R. Exec. Sec.
H. M. S.
Prentice, A. C. Asst.
Prescott, H. B. Sup. Lib.
Prettyman, A. I. Asst.
Preltyman, V. Prin. H. M. High
School
Prince, J. D. Prof.
Proben, C. J. Instr.
Prout, T. P. Clin. Asst.
Prudden, T. M. Prof.
Pupin, M. I. Prof.
Putnam, C. R. L. Dem.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIDENCB
Absent on leave
Tu. Th. 12:20-1
416 Hv.
37 Madison ave.
■
M. W. F. 3-4
306 E.
542 W. 114
P. & S.
4 W. 50
M. W. F.
I
12:20-1
614 F.
240 Sixth ave.
( Rose vi lie)
Newark, N. J.
T.
162 W. 129
P. & S.
128 E. 64
Th. F. 10-11
608 F.
4 E. 48
P. & S.
43 W. 53
M. F. 2
336 B.
Hartley Hall
P. & S.
9 W. 35
M. W. Th.
9:30-11
L.
Hartley Hall
T.
321 W. 104
H. M. S.
221 W. 104
P. & S.
155 W. 46
L.
34 Gramercy Pk.
Gym.
556 W. 163
M. W. Th.
9:30-11
H. M. S.
501 W. 120
Tu. 1 :3o-2
308 U.
Sterlington, N. Y.
P. & S.
970 Lexington ave.
V. C.
152 W. 57
P. & s.
160 W. 59
P. & S. 121 E. 38
Raabe, A. Clin. Asst.
Rautenstrauch, W. Adj. Prof.
Rea, Matilda G. Asst.
Reddick, H. W. Asst.
Redfield, H. S. Prof.
Reed, A. F. Tr.
Reed, Margaret A. Tutor
Reid, D. B. Asst.
Reimer, Marie, Instr.
Remy, A. F. J. Adj. Prof.
Reynolds, Grace P. Asst.
Reynolds, W. S. Instr.
Richard, E. D. Lect.
Richards, A. N. Instr.
Richards, C. R. Prof.
Richards, Mrs. E. H. Lect.
V. C.
609 E. 156
507 E.
554 W. Broadway,
Yonkers, N. Y.
T.
2 W. 32
M.-F. 9-12
505 F.
Livingston Hall
M.-F. 10-11
414 L.
H. M. S.
B.
1925 Seventh ave.
Gvm.
346 W. 57
Tu. Th. 1-2
438 B.
420 W. 118
M. W. 2
403 Hm.
222 W. 141
M. Tu. io-n
436 B.
17 E. 26
P. & S.
66 W. 71
Tu. Th. 3-4
410 Hm.
12 W. 103
P. & S.
311 W. 97
M. 3-4:30;
Th. 11-12
122 T.
239 W. 103
T.
1230 Amsterdam ave.
Id
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Richards, H. M. Prof.
Riggs, A. F. Asst.
Roantree, W. F. Tr.
Robbins, Ida E. Tr.
Robbins, Mrs. L. W. Neighbor-
hood Worker, Sp. S.
Robinson, E. Asst. Dir. Met.
Mus. of Art
Robinson, J. H. Prof.
Rogers, Lillian E. Tr.
Rosenheck, C. Clin. Asst.
Rubner, C. Prof.
Rusbv, H. H. Prof, and Dean
Coll. of Phar.
OFFICE HOURS
M. F. io-ii
OFFICE KF.SiriKNCE
316 B. 618 W. 114
P. & S. 135 E. 5+
H. M. S. 15 Wadsworth ave.
H. M. S. 417 W. 118
Sp. S. 94 Lawrence
Tu.Th. 11-11:30 403 L.
H. M. S.
V. c.
607 M.
M.-F. 10-11
Tu. 9:30;
Th. F. 1:30
Rusk, Elizabeth, Asst.
Russell, J. E. Prof, and Dean of
Teachers College M.-F.
Russell, J. I. Asst.
Russell, Martha M. Supt. Sloane
Maternity Hospital
Russell, Mabel C. Tr.
Ryder, G. H. Instr.
Phar.
T.
103 T.
P. & S.
S. M. H.
Sp. S.
P. & S.
567 W. 113
508 W. 113
240 W. 134
515 W. in
776 De Graw ave.
Newark, N. J.
500 W. 121
601 Madison ave.
457 W. 59
94 Lawrence
34 W. 55
Sachs, J. Prof.
Sage, Elizabeth, Instr.
Sanford, Laura, Sec. Dept. of
Phys. Educ. T. C.
Saunders, T. L. Instr.
Saville, M. H. Prof.
Sawyer, C. P. Press Representa-
tive
Savre, A. M. Asst.
Schenck, Aletta V. W. Asst.
Schmitt, A. E. Asst. Instr.
Schnepel, G. A. Clin. Asst.
Schulman, M. Clin. Asst.
Schulte, H. von W. Dem. and
Asst.
Schussler, Amy, Prin. Sp. S.
Scripture, E. W. Clin. Asst.
Seager, H. R. Prof.
Sears, J. T. Tr.
Seely, Bertha W. Sec. to Prin.
H. M. High Sch.
Seibert, Jeannette R. Recorder
Dept. Phys. Educ. T. C.
Seligman, E. R. A. Prof.
Sever, G. F. Prof.
M. W. 3-4;
S. io-ii
M.-F. 4-5
Tu. Th. 3
Tu. Th. 2:10-3
229 T.
T.
T.
P. & S.
405 S.
323 U.
604 Hrn.
T.
P. & S.
V. C.
V. C.
P. & S.
Sp. s.
V. c.
403 L.
H. M. S.
149 W. 81
2337 Broadway
430 W. 118
34 W. 55
323 W. 80
158 W. 106
6ll W. 112
123 E. 60
343 W. 29
42 W. 114
176 W. 87
558 W. 182
20 E. 45
H. M. S. 1230 Amsterdam ave.
Tu. Th. 1:30-2;
F. 2-3 409 L.
504 E.
640 Putnam ave.,
Bklyn.
324 W. 86
620 W. 116
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
15
n una
Severinghaus, W. L. Asst.
Sliear, T. L. Tutor
Shearer, L. H. Dem. and Asst.
Shepherd, W. R. Adj. Prof.
Sherman, F. D. Prof.
Sherman, H. C. Prof.
Shoemaker, A. Asst.
Shotwell, J. T. Adj. Prof.
Shrady, A. M.
Sicard, M. H. Clin. Asst.
Siceloff, L. P. Tutor
Silver, L. M. Clin. Asst.
Simkhovitch, V. G. Adj. Prof.
Simkhovitch, Mrs. Mary K. Adj.
Prof.
Simpson, W. K. Prof.
Sinclair, J. E. Asst.
Skarstrom, W. Instr.
Sleffel, C. C. Instr.
Sloane, W. M. Prof.
Smith, C. H. Asst.
Smith, D. E. Prof.
Smith, E. R. Ref. Lib.
Smith, Evelyn, Asst.
Smith, F. C. Clin. Asst.
Smith, H. Prof.
Smith, Munroe, Prof.
Snedden, D. S. Adj. Prof.
Solley, F. P. Instr.
Speranza, C. L. Prof.
Spiers, H. W. Tr.
Spingarn, J. E. Adj. Prof.
Sprague, S. E. Clin. Asst.
Starr, M. A. Prof.
Stackpole, Caroline, Asst.
Steele, M. Asst.
Stein, J. B. Clin. Asst.
Stevens, Romiett, Asst.
Stewart, C. A. Asst.
Stone, Theo. R. Tr.
Stoughton, B. Adj. Prof.
Strayer, G. D. Adj. Prof.
Strong, C. A. Prof.
Strong, Harriette L. Tr.
Strong, O. S. Instr.
Sturtevant, E. H. Tutor
Sumner, A. E. Instr.
Sutherland, Louise C. Instr.
Suzzallo, H. Adj. Prof.
Swift, G. M. Instr.
Sykes, F. H. Prof, and Dir. Ex-
tension Teaching
OIPICB HOURS
OFFICE
, IDENCB
T11. 1-5:30
401 F.
524 W. 123
Tu. 3-4
112 B.
509 W. 122
P. & s.
133 E. 57
468 Riverside Dr.
M. W. F. 1-5
613 Hv.
158 \V. 105
Tu. Th. F. 9-10
509 Hv.
527 W. 124
Gym.
265 Henry
Tu. io-ii
708 Hm.
Tu. 3-4
340 B.
160 W. 106
P. & s.
1 W. 68
V. C.
15 E. 47
M. Tu. 1:30-2
212 Hm.
Livingston Hall
V. C.
103 W. 72
M.-F. 2-4
307 L.
26 Jones
Tu. 4
308 B.
26 Jones
P. & s.
952 Lexington ave.
M. Tu. F. 1-4
505 Hm.
62 Taylor,
Newark, N. J.
M. W. F. S.
Gym.
510 W. 124
M.-F. 12:40-2
32 T.
509 W. 124
W. 2-3
704 Hm.
105 E. 69
P. & S.
2880 Broadway
Absent on leave
M.-F. 2-6
L.
118 W. 109
T.
195 Claremont ave.
V. C.
362 W. 57
P. & s.
44 W. 49
409 L.
152 E. 35
Daily 12-12:30
215 T.
63 Morningside
ave. E.
P. & S.
114 E. 60
M. 4; W. s
304 w.
120 E. 86
H. M. S.
Hartley Hall
M. W. 1 :3o-a
509 F.
9 W. 73
V. C.
71 W. 55
P. & S.
5 W. 54
T.
605 W. 115
P. & S.
Livingston Hall
V. c.
101 W. 80
T.
1230 Amsterdam ave,
Tu. F. 1-2
106 s.
259 W. 11
H. M. S.
419 W. 121
F. 2-4
512 M.
321 W. 94
M.Th. 10; W. 3
3i3 T.
530 W. 123
Tu. Th. 12:20
510 S.
Hotel Gotham
Sp. S.
430 W. 118
P. & S.
Livingston Hall
Tu. 10-10:50
112 B.
490 W. 136
P. & S.
127 W. 58
T.
265 W. 72
M. W. F. n
3*3 T.
Livingston Hall
P. & S.
20 W. 55
Daily 11
117 T.
Lowerre Summit Pk.
Yonkers, N. Y.
i6
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
Tassin, A. DeV. Lect.
Taylor, A. S. Asst. Instr.
Taylor, C. E. Asst.
Taylor, H. C. Instr.
Taylor, J. W. Asst.
Tenney, A. A. Tutor
Terry, C. T. Prof.
Thacher, J. S. Prof.
Thatcher, E. J. Instr.
Thomas, C. Prof.
Thompson, Elizabeth I. Asst.
Thorndike, A. H. Prof.
Thorndike, E. L. Prof.
Thurber, S. W. Instr.
Thurston, E. D., Jr. Asst.
Todd, G. W. Clin. Asst.
Todd, H. A. Prof.
Tombo, R., Jr. Adj. Prof, and
Registrar
Toms, Elizabeth I. Sec H. M. S.
Trent, W. P. Prof.
Trowbridge, C. C. Instr.
Tucker, S. A. Adj. Prof.
Tufts, F. L. Adj. Prof.
Turnure, P. R. Instr.
Tyson, H. H. Instr.
Ulig, W. C. Asst.
Ullman, K. B. Tr.
Underwood, L. M. Prof.
Upton, C. B. Instr.
Upton, Mrs. Siegried M. Tr.
Valentine, Laura, Lib. and Sec.
Sp. S.
Van Amringe, J. H. Prof, and
Dean, Columbia College
Van Arsdale, May B. Instr.
Van Beuren, F. T. Dem. and
Asst.
Van Pelt, J. V. Assoc. Dir. of
Atelier
Van Wagenen, C. D. Clin. Asst.
Van Zandt, Margaret, Sup. Lib.
Vogel, K. M. Instr.
Voorhees, J. D. Adj. Prof.
Vorisek, A. Prof.
Vulte, H. T. Adj. Prof.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE .
RESIDENCE
M. W. 12:20
139 B.
14 Lexington ave.
P. & S.
152 W. 57
P. & S.
24 W. 50
W. 2:10-3
206 w.
421 W. 118
M. Tu. Th. F.
5:30-6:30
414 L.
23 E. 77 _
P. & S.
839 Madison ave.
T.
Tu. Th. ro-11
315 u.
430 W. 116
M. io-ii
313 B.
21 First PL, Bklyn.
Tu. Th. 11-12
506 F.
205 W. 107
M. W. 2-3
321 T.
530 W. 123
P. & S.
104 E. 39
Daily 9-12
207 E.
113 E. 29
V. C.
225 West End ave.
M. W. s
308 w.
824 West End ave.
M.-F. 9-5 ;
S. 9-12
202 E.
628 W. 114
H. M. S.
44 W. 128
Absent on leave
M.-F. 1:10-5
401 F.
St. Anthony Hall,
Riverside Dr. and
116
102 Hv.
155 E. 61
M. 11-12;
W. F. 9-10
305 F.
541 W. 124
P. & S.
55 W. 49
P. & S.
47 W. 51
Tu. Th. 11-12
516 Hv.
242 Halsted,
E. Orange, N. J.
H. M. S.
Hartley Hall
M. 10-12
506 S.
Redding, Conn.
T.
504 W. 113
H. M. S.
504 W. 113
Sp. S.
94 Lawrence
W. F. 1:15
208 Hm.
48 E. 26
T.
457 W. 123
P. & S.
51 W. 52
126 E. 19
V. C.
15 E. 48
L.
415 W. 118
P. & S.
80 E. 55
P. & S.
180 W. 59
Phar.
115 W. 68
Tu.W.Th. 11-12
400 T.
33 Park ave., New
Rochelle, N. Y.
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
17
NAME
Wadsworth, A. B. Instr.
Walker, J. B. Clin. Lect. and
Instr.
Ward, F. E. Organist
Ware, W. R. Emer. Prof.
Warner, L. A. Instr.
Warren, C. P. Instr.
Webster, C. E. Clin. Asst.
Weeks, Mabel F. Adj. Prof.
Weick, C. W. Instr.
Weinrich, M. F. Asst.
Weinstein, J. W. Clin. Asst.
Weir, R. F. Emer. Prof.
Weiser, Lucy H. Tr.
Welker, W. H. Asst.
Wells, J. S. C. Adj. Prof.
Westcott, A. F. Lect.
Wetzel, R. A. Asst.
Wheeler, Clara M. Tr.
Wheeler, E. B. Asst.
Wheeler, J. R. Prof, and Act'g
Dean Fac. Fine Arts
Wheelock, Mrs. Elizabeth M. Tr.
Whitley, Mary T. Sect.
Whitman, R. Adj. Prof.
Whitney, D. D. Asst.
Whittemore, Laura B. Tr.
Wilcox, H. B. Asst.
Wilde, Harriet, Instr.
Wile, I. S. Clin. Asst.
Williams, L. R. Instr.
Williams, P. H. Clin. Asst.
Williams, R. H. Instr.
Williams, S. R. Tutor
Williams, W. R. Instr.
Wills, A. P. Adj. Prof.
Wilson, E. B. Prof.
Wimmer, C. P. Instr.
Windle, Anne E. Tr.
Wineberger, W. Asst.
Wissler, C. Lect.
Wittson, A. J. Clin. Asst.
Wood, F. C. Prof.
Wood, T. D. Prof.
Woodbridge, F. J. E. Prof.
Woodhull, J. F. Prof.
Woodrow, H. H. Lect
Woodruff, I. O. Asst.
OFFICE HOURS
01 PII E
DEKCE
P. & s.
180 W. 59
P. & s.
33 E. 33
M.-F. 1 14.5-
12:30
Chapel
216 King,
Port Chester, N. Y.
Milton, Mass.
T.
2 Home,
White Plains, N. Y.
602 Hv.
Woodcliff Lake, N. J.
V. C.
749 Madison ave.
Tu. 11-12
136 B.
607 W. 116
Tu. Th. 3-4
119 T.
507 W. 124
M. 1 :io-2
605 E.
76 Ashburton ave.,
Yonkers, N. Y.
V. C.
61 E. 107
11 E. 54
H. M. S.
430 W. 118
P. & S.
148 W. 67
Tu. Th. 11-12
513 Hv.
320 W. 83
Th. 11
607 Hm,
417 W. 121
Tu. Th. 10-12
303 F.
54 Morningside
ave. E.
H. M. S.
502 W. 113
H. M. S.
430 W. 118
T.
541 W. 124
P. & S.
283 Lexington ave.
602 s.
520 W. 123
H. M. S.
8 Morningside
ave. E.
P. & S.
515 Madison ave.
T.
476 W. 152
V. C.
2493 Broadway
P. & S.
839 Madison ave.
V. C.
22 E. 48
T.
527 W. 124
Tu. 11-12
232 B.
509 W. 124
P. & S.
Hotel San Remo
603 F.
M.-Th. 9-10
609 S.
468 Riverside Drive
Phar.
115 W. 68
Sp. S.
94 Lawrence
P. & S.
252 Willis ave-
V. C.
318 W. 126
P. & S.
201 W. 55
M.-F. 9-10; 2-3
157 T.
500 W. 121
M. W. 2-3
420 L.
Grove St.,
Peekskill, N. Y.
W. 11:30-12
413 T.
501 W. 120
Tu.-F. 2-4
418 B.
Hartley Hall
P. & S.
152 W. 78
i8
DIRECTORY OF OFFICERS
NAME
Woodward, B. D. Prof.
Woodworth, R. S. Adj. Prof.
Woolman, Mrs. Mary S. Prof.
Woolson, I. H. Adj. Prof.
Yard, A. B. Clin. Asst.
Yocum, J. G. Dem.
Yohannan, A. Lect.
Young, C. H. Prof.
Young, Elizabeth D. Tr.
Zerbe, Margaret M. Instr.
Zinsser, H. Asst.
OFFICE HOURS
OFFICE
RESIEEVCE
Absent on leave
M. W. 3
409 s.
Montrose, N. Y.
Tu. io-ii ; 4-5
F. 11-12
332 T.
21 W. 101
M.-F. 9:30-5
308 E.
V. C.
28 W. 105
P. & S.
128 E. 73
Tu. Th. 3-4
401 w.
321 W. 118
M. 3-4
514 Hm.
312 W. 88
Tu. 2-3
211 L.
Sp. S.
71 E. 96
T.
500 W. 121
P. & S.
101 W. 80
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
The italic letter following the name indicates the school in which the student
is primarily registered — as follows:
e College pi School of Political Science
/ School of Law s School of Mines, Chemistry, and
m School of Medicine Engineering
p School of Pure Science b Barnard College
ph School of Philosophy / Teachers College
fa Fine Arts (Architecture, Music and Design)
phar School of Pharmacy
The numbers I, 2, 3, and 4 preceding these letters indicate the class. The
abbreviation gr indicates a graduate student in the professional schools,
nm a non-matriculated student.
The names of women are printed in italics.
" Hartley," " Livingston," " Brooks " and " Whittier " refer to the Univer-
sity Residence Halls.
For names of students not in Directory, see Class lists in Annual Catalogue,
and for addresses consult card index in Office of Registrar.
Abbey, E. N. 3 / Livingston
Abbott, A. H. 4 t 510 W. 124
Abeles, M. J. S. pi 122 E. in
Abelow, S. P. pi
74 Sumner ave., Bklyn.
Abrams, L. D. pi
831 Willoughby ave., Bklyn.
Abrons, H. 3 m 1292 Park ave.
Acker, J. fa 2329 Seventh ave.
Ackerman, H. C. ph 175 9th ave.
Ackerman, P. C. 1 m
742 Union, Bklyn.
Ackerman, S. H., Jr. 1 771
742 Union, Bklyn.
Adams, A. F. H. / a
191 Ryerson, Bklyn.
Adams, C. W. / a
2372 Seventh ave.
Adams, F. D. ph 423 W. 118
Adams, F. F. p
Adams, F. L. nm I 150 Nassau
Adams, H. 4 t Whittier
Adams, H 4 s 511 W. 122
Adams, K. M. 4. t
Upper Montclair
Adams, P. H. 3 m 106 E. 70
Adamson, E. W. gr t 4IQ W. 118
Adler, R. S. / a Livingston
Adlman, S. 2 c
15 Ryle ave., Paterson
Agnew, T. gr t Bloomfield
Agramonte, P. H. s 292 W. 92
Aiguier, H. L. 2 b
622 Clifton ave., Newark
Albertson, W. R. f a 619 W. 113
Albright, V. E. ph Hartley
Alexander, H. 1 m
6x6 River, Hoboken
Alexander, G. D. 3 c
14 St. Nicholas PI.
Alexander, E. R. 3 s 565 W. 113
Alexander, I. 3 b 310 W. Q4
Alexander, L. F. 2 b
Q40 St. Nicholas ave.
Alexander, L. H. ph 602 W. 146
Alexander, R. T. 3 c 142 E. 19
Alexander, T. M. 4 c
764 St. Nicholas ave.
Alexander, W. A. 2 s
455 E 18, Bklyn.
Allan, A. R. 3 b Montclair
Allen, B. M. 3 t Whittier
Allen, E. Z. 4 b Hotel San Remo
Allen, E. L. I b 294 W. 92
19
20
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Allen, F. M. i s
1214 Main, Peekskill
Allen, L. 3 t 102 W. 90
Allen L. B. ph 206 W. 133
Allen, T. A. phar Metuchen, N. J.
Alles, R. H. ph 130 W. 123
Ailing, F. A. i m 135 W. 93
A His, M. L. pi Whittier
Allison, G. D. pi 700 Park ave.
Altemburg, E. 1 c
2803 Third ave., Bronx
Alterman, J. J. 3 c 135 Eighth ave.
Alvord, K. S. pi Whittier
Amano, S. I. pi 64 E. 133
Amdursky, A. M. 1 c
2197 Eighth ave.
Amend, C. G. 4 s 33 W. 81
Ames, J. S. 3 m Hartley
Amidon, D. E. 3 c Livingston
Amy, E. C. 4 / 519 W. 121
Ananieff, V. P. 1 s 5 W. 125
Anderson, E. L. ph 50 E. 49
Anderson, L. S. 2 b 318 43, Bklyn.
Anderson, R. H. 2 / Hartley
Anderson, W. C. R. gr t Hartley
Anderton, W. P. 1 m
180 Madison ave.
Andrei, C. 4 s 142 W. 83
Andvon, I. gr t
355 Penn'a ave., Bklyn.
Angell, M. A. 3 *
824 Dawson, Bronx
Annan, Robert 2 s 608 W. 113
Appel, A. 3 c 82 E. 109
Appel, F. J. 4 / 32 W. 123
Arbus, C. M. 3 t 509 W. 122
Arkenburgh, G. S. 3 b 517 W. 124
Arkush, J. E. 2 s
428 Central Park W
Arms, G. T. 2 / Yale Club, 44
Armstrong, A. C. 4 s 612 W. 116
Armstrong, C. P. 4 b 144 E. 37
Armstrong, D. 3 c 144 E. 37
Armstrong, L. J. 4 b 144 E. 37
Armstrong, L. L. 3 b 392 Mountain
ave., Upper Montclair
Armstrong, M. E. 2 b
756 Putnam ave., Bklyn.
Arner, G. B. pi Livingston
Arnold, F. C. gr t 277 W. 114
Arnold, J. L. p
Gould Hall, N. Y. U.
Arnstein, W. L. 3 J 205 E. 57
Aran, B. M. 3 b 612 W. 1/5
Ascher, B. 3 s 59 Second ave.
Aschner, P. W. 2 c
in Clark, Bklyn.
Ash, A. 4 b 316 W. 103
Ash, M. f a 316 IV. 103
Ashe, J. R. 1 m 151 W. 103
Asher, J. 1 / 18 E. 9
Asker, L. gr t Whittier
Askonvith, D. 4 b
177* Madison ave.
Aston, A. 3 / 78 Hanson PL, Bklyn.
Auerbach, C. 2 b 304 W. 87
A tier bach, E. F. ph 304 W. 87
Augsbury, E. S. gr t 132 E. 23
Augur, V. 4 t Ave. N and E. 10
Bklyn.
Auleta, V. H. ph 304 E. no
Ault, H. A. / 1 409 W. 127
Ault, J. P. p 409 W. 127
Auslander, Armin gr t 251 W. 123
Ausmus, D. M. ph
Tompkinsville, S. I.
Austin, K. L. 3 t 526 W. 122
Avent, J. M. 2 t 901 Ogden ave.
Avery, E. T. 3 t Whittier
Avery, W. c 98 Second PL, Bklyn.
Axelrad, J. 4 m
1066 Fortieth, Bklyn.
Axman, L. H. 1 c
321 St. Nicholas ave.
Axt, May C. 4 b
Port Richmond, S. I.
Axtell, S. B. 2 / 353 W. 17
Ayer, F. S. 1 s
123 31, Weehawken
Aymar, F. W. pi
225 West End ave.
Ayres, D. D. 4 t
109 Grand, Bklyn.
Ayres, D. R. 3 m 337 W. 34
Ayers, W. C. 1 s 60S W. 113
Babb, E. A. 3 t Whittier
Babcock, H. G. 4 s 500 W. 123
Babcock, T. S. 2 s
Pelham Manor, N. Y.
Bach, H. M. 1 s 407 W. 117
Bach, R. F. 3 c 2516 Eighth ave.
Back, E. M. 4 t
312 S. Broadway, Yonkers
Baegel, M. 4 m 112 Henry
Baehr, G. 4 m 78 W. 94
Baer, S. 2 s 114 E. 87
Baerd, G. J. 4 t Whittier
Bagley, G. J. 4 c Rahway, N. J.
Bagnell, R. H. 4 c
268 Stuyvesant ave., Bklyn.
Bailey, J. G. pi 700 Park ave.
Bailey, M. H. nm b 92 Fourth ave.
Bailey, M. W. 2 b 92 Fourth ave.
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
21
Bailly, E. C. 2 / Hartley
Bain, A. VV. gr t Livingston
Bains, T. M., Jr. i s 520 \V. 123
Baker, B. W. 4 / 556 W. 186
Baker, E. F. ph 511 W. 122
Baker, H. D. 1 c 325 W. 108
Baker, Jr., J. A. 1 s 314 W. 88
Baker, J/. E. 4 i
Closter, Bergen Co., N. J.'
Baker, N. B. 3 t Wintrier
Baker, V. pliar 21 Wickham ave.,
Middleton, N. Y.
Balch, F. E. 3 t Whittier
Baldt, L. I. 3 t 501 W. 123
Baldwin, B. J. pi 700 Park ave.
Baldwin, B. N. 3 t
47 Claremont ave.
Baldwin, E. F. 3 / 140 W. 102
Baldwin, H. V. V. s 413 W. 117
Baldwin, L. W. 1 / 619 W. 113
Baldwin, M. F. 4 t Whittier
Ball, D. A. 4 t
210 Alexander ave.
Bamber, W. R. 2 s
844 Union, Bklyn.
Bamberger, A. L. p
3Q2 First, Bklyn.
Bangs, F. N. 2 c 627 W. 115
Bangs, G. H. 2 s 431 W. 162
Bangs, H. McC. 2 / 12 W. 44
Bangser, A. 2 / Livingston
Banks, H. P. 4c 304 W. 91
Banks, V. M. 3 t Whittier
Bannon, W. J. 2 m
Baronojf, R. 4 t 529 W. 135
Barber, F. W. 3 t 423 W. 118
Barber, J. F. 2 / Hartley
Barber, W. H. 3 c
210 Rodney, Bklyn.
Bard, H. E. gr t 421 W. 121
Barili, Jr., A. f a 76 W. 105
Barlow, A. E. 1 s
S3 3a Lafayette ave., Bklyn.
Barnes, A. E. gr t
Freeport, N. Y.
Barnes, C. P. ph 1002 E. 177
Barnes, S. 4 t 420 W. 118
Barnett, I. I. t 5 W. 112
Barnett, N. 4 m 400 West End ave.
Barnett, N. M. 4 t 511 W. 122
Barnes, L. M. W. 3 t 509 W. 122
Barnes, M. 3 t
Barney, M. I. 4 t
57 Hillyer, Orange
Barnitt, F. B. 3 s Hartley
Baroff, A. 2 c 1458 Brook ave.
Barr, L. E. 4 t 418 W. 118
Barrett, A. L. 4 t 508 W. 122
Barrett, G. H. 2 c 257 YV. 86
Barrett, P. S. 2 c 558 W. 113
Barrett, S. A. ph 515 YV. 124
Barrick, M. O. ph
243a Summit ave., Jersey City
B arrows, A. P. ph
$3 Washington Sq.
Barrows, T. 2 b 102 W. 11$
Barrows, W. 3 b Brooks
Bartlett, D. A. p 507 W. 102
Bartow, L. 3 c 33 W. 73
Batchelor, C. B. gr t 318 W. 57
Bates, E. C. 4 m 108 W. 64
Bates, S. E. 1 s
243 E. 6, Plainfield, N. J.
Bates, YV. S. 4 j 49 E. 49
Batt, R. M. 2 c Hartley
Battle, Jr., J. A. 3 s Livingston
Baum, A. L. 3 c 252 YV. 128
Baum, P. 3 / 130 E. 115
Baumann, O. I. 2 m 336 E. 72
Baumeister, V. A. 1 s
402 Amity St., Flushing, N. Y.
Baumer, H. P. 1 / 100 William
Baumert, C. 3 t 815 Park ave.
Baxter, E. P. 3 t
Baxter, M. W. pi Whittier
Baxter, R. YV. ph Chelsea Square
Bazinet, A. 3 t
1228 Amsterdam ave.
Beach, K. A. pi 700 Park ave.
Beam, L. E. 3 b
Bean, F. L. phar McGray, N. Y.
Beard, Jr., J. T. 2 c Hartley
Beck, D. 2 m 9 E. 112
Becker, B. M. 3 t 254 W. 98
Becker, F. J. gr t 341 E. 124
Beckwith, C. J. p Whittier
Beckwith, M. W. ph 423 W. 118
Bedell, Mrs. S. G.
997 Greene ave., Bklyn.
Bedinger, H. G. 3 / Livingston
Beecher, H. C. 3 t Whittier
Beeckman, F. L. pi 141 W. 104
Beekman, B. 3 b 46 W. 129
Beekman, R. 4 b 46 W, 129
Beers, B. A. 4 b
35 Clinton PL, Jamaica, N. Y.
Beggs, G. E. 2 s Livingston
Behr, K. H. 1 / 41 W. 74
Beirne, W. B. P. F. c 504 W. 158
Belinkoff, S. 2 c
137 W. 27, Bayonne, N. J.
Belknap, W. B. 1 c 204 W. 83
Bell, H. K. 2 m
305 Barclay, Flushing, N. Y.
22
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Bell, M. B. V. 3 t 32 Bodine,
West New Brighton, S. I.
Bell, Jr., W. A. 2 c
19 Bay 38, Bklyn.
Beller, A. J. 2 m 133 E. 97
Bender, S. 1 c
291 Stuyvesant ave., Bklyn.
Bender, T. 2 m
76 Jasper, Paterson, N. J.
Bendick, A. J. 3 m Ocean and Sun-
rise Terrace, Tompkinsville, S. I.
Benedict, V. 2 s 523 W. 152
Bennett, A.L. I b
Georgetown, Conn.
Bennett, C. R. 4 t 510 W. 124
Bennet, M. S. gr t Whtttiei
Bennett, R. C. nm I Hartley
Benson, C. D. 1 s 255 W. 101
Benson, L. W. 3 / 431 W. 121
Bentley, E. 4 t
Benton, N. K. 3 m
188 N. 9, Newark, N. J.
Berenberg, D. P. 1 c
887 Greene ave., Bklyn.
Berg, A. V. / a Livingston
Bergamini, R. 3 t 55 W. 9
Berge, F. O. 2 c 418 W. 118
Bergmann, R. C. 3 s 19 E. 126
Bergstein, A. gr t i486 Fifth ave.
Berinstein, B. 2 c 749 Trinity ave.
Berkowitz, H. 1 c
798 Tremont ave.
Berliner, L. H. 4 c 234 W. 139
Bermingham, E. J. / a 618 W. 147
Bernard, U. M. 3 b Brooks
Bernays, J. pi 121 W. 119
Bernfeld, L. M. 3 s 28 W. 118
Bernkopf, A. E. 3 t 503 W. 121
Bernkopf, B. M. 4 t 223 W. 138
Bernstein, C. D. / a 76 W. 119
Bernstein, M. H. 3 / 141 W. 97
Berry, E. H. p 560 W. 113
Bertini, A. A. 3 / 154 Bleecher
Bessie, A. 1 m 991 Union ave.
Best, H. pi 474 W. 152
Best, W. N. nm c 544 W. 113
Bettelheim, Jr., E. S. 1 s 175 W. 8s
Betts, C. E. 1 s Westport, Conn.
Betts, G. H. gr t
1525 Amsterdam ave.
Bevier, L. 2 / 244 W. 104
Bibby, H. L. 2 m Paterson
Bidstrup, E. 3 t 46 Jerome, Bklyn.
Bieber, P. D. 1 c 383 E. 8
Bijur, H. 4 c 160 W. 75
Billingsley, P. 4 c
446 Macon, Bklyn.
Birch, G. H. nm s 611 W. no
Bisch, L. E. 1 m Livingston
Bischoff, S. 2 s 103 W. 114
Bishop, F. A. 4 t Whittier
Bishop, F. A. I b 500 W. 122
Bishop, F. W. 3 c 202 W. 103
Bishop, H. A. 3 t Whittier
Bishop, S. H. 1 c 127 W. 30
Bissell, CY.fa 612 W. 115
Bissell, L. J. 1 / Livingston
Bissell, P. St. G. pi Freeport, L. I.
Bissell, Jr., P. St. G. 3 c
Freeport, L. I.
Bixby, F. A. gr t Whittier
Blaber, J. T. 2 c 203 18, Bklyn.
Blaber, M. P. 2 m 203 18, Bklyn.
Black, F. A. 2 b
211 Clinton, Bklyn.
Black, H. S. 2 s
63 Franklin ave., New Rochelle
Black, Jr., L. M. /
376 McDonough, Bklyn.
Blackwood, W. C. 3 s
404 St. Nicholas ave.
Blair, A. E. 3 t Whittier
Blake, C. D. 3 t 510 W. 124
Blakely, S. B. 4 m 35 W. 65
Blakeman, F. T. / a 48 W. 59
Blakey, L. S. pi 419 W. 121
Blan/L. B. gr t
87 Richmond ave., Port Richmond
Blanchard, C. D. 3 t 521 W. 122
Blanco, A. phar Hartley
Blauvelt, A. la T. 4 I Whittier
Blechman, J. P. 2 / 4 E. 119
Blinn, O. S. 3 <:
496 Jefferson ave., Bklyn.
Bliss, E. F. 3 s 135 E. 49
Bliss, N. E. 2 j Livingston
Bloch, S. I b 552 W. 161
Block, A. P. 3 m 87 W. 119
Block, M. J. 1 s 1285 Third ave.
Blocker, S. ph
New Brunswick, N. J.
Blodgeit, C. E. 3 t Whittier
Bloom, I. 4 c 61 E. 3
Bloom, I. M. 4 c 124 W. 117
Bloomgarden, A. S. 4 m
550 Ave. A., Bayonne, N. J.
Blow, G. A. 3 s Livingston
Bluhm, J. gr t 25 E. 124
Blum, H. 3 m New Brunswick
Blum, J. 2 m 106 W. 115
Blumborg, I. B. 1 c 113 Second
Blumberg, H. p
268 Stockton, Bklyn.
Blumenfeldt, R. 2 s 11 W. 82
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
23
Blumenthal, A. S. 1 s 240 W. 102
Boardman, M. T. 4 b
Bloomfield, N. J.
Boas, E. P. 1 c
Franklin ave., Grantwood, N. J.
Boas, II. M. 3 b
Franklin ave., Grantwood, N. J.
Bockee, M. P. 4 t 141 W. 104
Bockshitzky, S. 2 m 19 Montgomery
Bode, G. H. 4 s 424 W. 147
Bode, L. H. is 231 W. 137
Bogert, M. I b
58 Lawrence, Flushing, L. I.
Bohan, L. 2 b Brooks
Bohler, R. F. nm s Astor House
Boillot, E. / a 520 W. 123
Bole, G. A. 2 j 170 Broadway
Bondy, E. L. 3 /
477 Manhattan ave.
Bonestell, C. K., Jr. / a
Bonfils, G. A. 2 b
147 Union ave., Jamaica
Bonner, R. O. 3 s Livingston
Bonnlander, V. C. 4 c Hartley
Bonsall, A. L. nm t Whittier
Bonsall, U. F. M. ph Livingston
Bonsfield, H. W. 1 s
1493 Pacific, Bklyn.
Boorman, K. M. 4 c
Riverside Drive and 173 st.
Boote, M. L. 3 t 99 Highland ave.
Borchardt, A. H. 3 s
1330 Pacific, Bklyn.
Borchardt, E. M. 4 c 352 E. 124
Borland, M. nm b 116 E. 37
Born, S. 2 s 320 W. 139
Bosch, E. A. p 275 W. 145
Bosch, J. A. 1 b 660 E. 163
Botsford, C. S. 2 / 531 W. 155
Bowers, F. T. 1 c
650 Kosciusko, Bklyn.
Bowers, L. P. pi 700 Park ave.
Bowers, W. C. 4 m
Washington, N. J.
Bowes, C. M. 2 s 404 W. 116
Bowes, W. R. 4 s 404 W. 116
Bowles, Jr., P. E. 2 s
Bowman, Jr., A. M. nm I
418 W. 118
Bowman, C. M. p 151 W. 105
Bowman, K. H. 1 c Hartley
Bowdish, L. F. gr t
37 Kenilworth PL, Bklyn.
Boyd, M. A. 3 b
Jessup PL, High Bridge
Boyle, Jr., A. C. p
1249 Amsterdam ave.
Boyle, J. N. 3 / 531 W. 113
Boyson, C. H. 3 I Whittier
Bradford, A. H. pi 700 Park ave.
Brady, Jr., W. G. 4 c 109 W. 122
Bradshaw, W. M. 3 m 55 E. 72
Braender, W. P. u
20 B'way, White Plains, N. Y.
Brainerd, H. B. 3 c 135 E. 30
Brainerd, H. B. / a 135 E. 30
Brainin, C. S. 4 c
1851 Madison ave.
Bramwell, G. M. 1 c
Lawrence, L. I.
Brand, C. S. pi
72 and Lexington ave.
Brandan, G. J. ph
115 Butler, Bklyn.
Brandenburg, E. K. p Whittier
Brandley, W. G. 4 c
52 Hillside PI., Newark
Brandt, R. C. 1 c
407 Washington ave., Bklyn.
Brautigam, E. R. ph
32 Lincoln, East Orange, N. J.
Brazil, A. M. 2 s Hartley
Brazil, L. M. nm s Hartley
Breck, W. R. 3 c
125 Wads worth ave.
Breckinridge, M. G. ph
Breed, P. ph 503 W. Ill
Breene, M. L. ph Whittier
Breitenfeld, E. 3 c 221 E. 63
Brenner, E. C. 4 m
174 St. Nicholas ave.
Brenner, N. 2 c 252 Carroll, Bklyn.
Brenner, S. / a 107 Second ave.
Brett, G. M. p Hartley
Brettain, J. B. 2 c 531 W. 113
Breunig, V. E. phar
52 Sixteenth ave., Newark
Brewer, A. T. t Whittier
Brewer, M. D. 4 t Whittier
Brewster, A. D. ph 527 W. 124
Briggs, A. B. 4 t Whittier
Briggs, B. I. 3 t Whittier
Briggs, R. W. 1 s 280 Wallace ave.
Bridgeman, L. W. 4 c
Astoria, N. Y.
Brill, A. |f 391 E. 157
Broadhurst, R. L. gr t
320 Greene ave., Bklyn.
Brock, R. E. nm c 429 W. 117
Bronson, B. S. 4 c 604 W. 114
Broe, A. L. 2 s 214 E. 61
Brooks, H. B. 3 t Whittier
Brophy, P. F. 3 s Livingston
Brown, B. E. 3 t 515 W. ill
24
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Brown, C. B. 2 s 337 W. 34
Brown, E. S. 1 s
64 Orient Way, Rutherford, N. J.
Brown, F. E. 4 m 35 W. 65
Brown, F. L. 2 m 231 W. 69
Brown, H. I b Brooks
Brown, H. M. 3 t Whittier
Brown, J. I b
94 Shelion ave., Jamaica
Brown, J. S. gr t 47 W. 66
Brown, L. A. 3 t Whittier
Brown, L. A. 3 c
1838 Madison ave.
Brown, L. H. 2 s
Hotel Marie Antoinette
Brown, Miss M. L. ph 131 W. 58
Brown, R. S. 2 c
216 Third St., Jersey City
Brown, Jr., W. H. 3 c 102 W. 93
Brown, K. C. 3 s 1235 Tinton ave.
Browne, D. H. pi 700 Park ave.
Browne, E. N. p Whittier
Browne, M. E. p
1539 Pacific, Bklyn.
Brownell, E. G. 4 m 314 W. 56
Brownell, M. 1 c 569 W. 184
Bruce, W. J. pi 135 W. 143
Buck, K. W. pi Hartley
Bruckheimer, R. M. 1 m
22 Mt. Morris Park W.
Brundin, T. M. P. 4 b
112 Clinton, Corona, L. I.
Bruning, E. E. M. I b
317 73 Bklyn.
Bruno, A. 1 c
1249 Amsterdam ave.
Brunson, Geo. H. pi 500 W. 132
Brush, A. C. 4 t 113 W. 69
Bryan, E. H. t Campyan, X. J.
Buchbinder, H. E. p 85 Willett
Buchner, Jr., C. J. 2 /
789 Willoughby ave., Bklyn.
Bucher, I. H. 3 t Whittier
Bucher, M. E. ph
411 Bullsferry Road, Weehawken
Buchtenkirch, W. E, u 228 E. 31
Buckisch, W. G. 2 c
595 E. 7, Bklyn.
Budds, M. H. 4 b 154 W. 105
Budinich, J. t 143 W. 117
Buemming, C. A. 3 t
95 Cornelia, Bklyn.
Buffett, B. R. 3 / I ivingston
Bugbee, E. 3 b 500 W. 124
Buland, M. E. ph Whittier
Bulkley, C. 0. 3 / 627 W. 115
Bulkley, K. 3 m 531 Madison ave.
Bundren, V. 3 t Whittier
Burdett, L. C. 3 /
2434 Seventh ave.
Burdick, C. K. 3 / 633 W. 115
Burdick, E. M. 4 t Whittier
Burditt, T. H. / a Hartley
Burger, F. 2 b
552 Sutter ave., Bklyn.
Burgers, E. P. J. 1 s 508 W. 113
Burke, A. M. I b Brooks
Burke, R. P. 4 m 25 W. 65
Burkhalter, F. E. 4 c Livingston
Burlingham, G. S. p
2776 Decatur ave., Bedford Park
Burnap, S. R. 3 m 301 W. 109
Burne, E. I b Douglaston, L. I.
Burnett, T. W. 4 m 3421 B'way
Burnham, M. I. 4 t 609 W. 135
Burns, E. C. I b
162 Eighth ave., Bklyn.
Burns, R. A. I b
27 Sound View, Port Chester
Burritt, B. B. gr t 94 Lawrence
Burrows, E. M. 4 b
25 Neperon Rd., Tarrytown
Buseck, L. 3 t
Butler, A. S. ph Whittier
Butler, B. T. p 3198 Hull ave.
Butler, C. L. p Whittier
Butler, H. R. 3 t 346 W. 71
Butler, M. E. 4 t 346 W. 71
Byerly, E. M. ph 423 W. Il8
Bykowsky, H. E. phar 10 W. 65
Byrne, F. J. 4 s
623 Lexington ave.
Byrne, J. F. nm c 132 W. 77
Byrne, M. B. C. 3 t
370 Cypress ave.
Byrne, M. C. ph
338 Decatur, Bklyn.
'"ahoone, W. M. s 530 W. 123
Caldwell, Jr., J. H. 1 s
Callan, A. M. I b 816 E. 176
Caiman, D. 3 b 127 W..8l
Campbell, F. W. 3 m
288 Union ave., Bklyn.
Campbell, L. L. 1 / Livingston
Campbell, M. A. gr t
467 Bergen ave., Jersey City
Campbell, N. 4 t 65 Brookfield Rd,
Upper Montclair
Campbell, S. E. 4 t Whittier
Campbell, V. H. 4 t
Lowerre Summit Park, Yonkers
Campus, E. 2 m 64 Delancey
Cane, W. G. 3 c 519 W. 121
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
25
Cannon, G. L. p
Clay ave., near 175
Canto, Y. H. 4 m 28 W. 137
Capablanca, J. R. 1 s Hartley
Capo, G. R. f a 51 W. 139
Capron, B. A. 4 t If hittier
Carames, A. / a 104 Lenox ave.
Caranicolas, G. N. 2 / 145 W. 36
Carbone, M. G. 4 s 102 W. 56
Cardozo, D. 1 c 337 W. 70
Cardozo, S. B. 2 c 337 W. 70
Carlin, J. E. nm in 13 10 Clay ave.
Carlson, E. W. p
Carlucci, G. A 4 m 47 Seventh st.
Carmichael, C. 3 c 165 W. 58th
Carpenter, R. 3 c 253 W. 100
Carpenter, W. M. 3 5 253 W. 100
Carpentier, M. A. ph 49 W. 94
Carr, H. L. 2 s Hartley
Carrig, F. J. 2 c 758 West End ave.
Carroll, A. L. 3 b 178 W. 88
Carroll, C. R. 3 c 178 W. 88
Carroll, R. I b Brooks
Carter, G. B. pi 558 W. 113
Carter, K. F. 1 s
121 Neperan Rd., Tarrytown
Caruso, C. W. 1 c
142 Seventh ave., Newark
Casey, J. F. 3 m
Casey, M. A. 4 b 174 E. 82
Cassebeer, A. F. 4 m 118 W. 64
Cassebeer, \V. H. / a Hartley
Cassel, T. I b 1976 Madison ave.
Cassetta, D. 4 c
180 Broadway, Astoria, L. I.
Cassini, H. C. 4 m Orange
Castell, G. O. 1 c 618 W. 136
Casterlin, E. H. pi 530 W. 123
Castritsy, G. P. ph 230 W. 95
Caswell, E. T. 1 s
7 Toledo ave., Elmhurst
Catlin, W. B. pi Livingston
Catton, J. E. 3 t Whittier
Cowley, A. A. ph
341 Ave. C, Bayonne
Cazin, A. p
1108 Bloomfield, Hoboken
Cella, C. D. 4 c
206 Hudson, Hoboken
Celler, E. 2 c
838 Greene ave., Bklyn.
Cerussi, B. P. 3 s
554 Courtland ave.
Chapman, F. B. / a 627 W. 115
Chmiehuski, H. 1 I Livingston
Chamberlain, E. B. ph
700 Park ave.
Chamberlain, E. C. nm s
500 W. 143
Chamberlin, C. ph Whittier
Chamberlain, J. P. nm I 131 E. 55
Chamberlin, M. 4 t W hittier
Chambers, F. W. 3 / 4J7 W. 117
Chanalis, M. N. 3 c 207 W. 115
Chandler, H. C. 4 t 503 IV. 121
Chapin, H. E. 1 / 623 W. 142
Chapin, J. P. 2 c 623 W. 142
Hamilton Park, New Brighton
Chapman, M. B. pi 100 W. 85
Chase, A. G. pi
115 Schermerhorn, Bklyn.
Chen, H. C. pi Hartley
Chen, W. F. p Livingston
Chenev, C. O. 3 c 552 Lenox ave.
Cheney, G. W. 4 t
38 Morningside ave., Yonkers
Cheny, Jr., W. A. 1 s
67 Waller ave., White Plains
Cherry, W. H. 1 /
373 Manhattan ave.
Child, Jr., F. S. 3 m Hospital
Lexington ave. and 42
Child, Jr., A. M. 3 c 169 Franklin
Childs, R. 2 b 68 W. 119
Childs, S. H. 1 c
362 Riverside Drive
Chilian, S. A. 1 m 1238 Third ave.
Chrislip, A. E. gr t 419 W. 121
Christian, A. M. f a 27 W. 67
Chrystie, J. N. 3 s 101 W. 128
Church, E. C. 1 / 4 E. 130
Claiborne, R. R. 1 c 226 E. 60
Clapp, E. R. 4 b Brooks
Clare, J. L. 3 / 5 W. 122
Clark, C. M. 2 c 568 W. 173
Clark, D. L. / a 318 W. 57
Clark, J. H. / a Hartley
Clark, J. M. nm c 616 W. 113
Clark, L. M. 3 I
Christie Heights, Leonia, N. J.
Clark, M. A. gr t Bedford, N. Y.
Clark, M. M. ph
305 Sixth ave., Bklyn.
Clark, S. M. 1 s
427 Franklin ave., Bklyn.
Clark, T. F. 3 / 54 E. 54
Clark, W. E. pi C. of C. of N. Y.
Clarkson, W. T. pi 700 Park ave.
Claypole, M. E. 4 t Whittier
Clement, A. A. I b 467 W. 163
Clemson, W. E. 2 s
402 Broad, Newark
Clinkscales, L. D. 3 / Livingston
Clough, B. gr t Whittier
26
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Cloughen, Jr., J. i s 215 E. 117
Coates, G. 4 t 511 W. 122
Cobb, E. P. 4 t Whittier
Cobb, J. L. 3 c 362 W. 57
Cobb, W. F. 1 m 5 W. 125
Coble, M. S. 4 m 113 E. 96
Cobden, Jr., R, 1 j
Riverside Drive and 116
Cochran, J. I. 3 b 120 W. 12
Cocke, H. M. 3 t 345 W. 122
Coffin, M. 3 t 519 W. 121
Cohen, A. 4 t
2210 Aqueduct a<ve. E.
Cohen, A. ph 747 E. 5
Cohen, A. B. gr I
1402 Pitkin ave., Bklyn.
Cohen, H. 3 c 29 Attorney
Cohen, H. A. 2 m 143 W. 11
Cohen, H. L. ph 38 W. 93
Cohen, I. 3 c Anderson ave. and 165
Cohen, I. 3 / 309 W. 128
Cohen, J. H. 2 c 43 W. 87
Cohen, S. 2 m 507 W. 157
Cohen, S. M. 2 c 107 Madison
Cohen, S. R. pi 1383 Dean, Bklyn.
Cohn, A. A. 2 / Hartley
Cohn, B. L. 2 c Hartley
Cohn, C. T. 3 j 209 W. 118
Cohn, E. 3 t 1171 Park ave.
Cohn, H. 3 s 126 E. 83
Cohn-McMaster, A. M. 3 c
2018 Fifth ave.
Cohn, Sidney, 3 m
2051 Belmont ave.
Colas, N. 1 s 134 W. 64
Cole, A. B. 1 s
100 Montclair ave., Montclair
Cole, H. T. 1 s 524 W. 123
Cole, M. F. ph
121 Locust Hill ave., Yonkers
Cole, P. G. 2 m 356 W. 57
Coleman, A. A. ph Pelham Manor
Coleman, J. G gr t
617 Bloomfield, Hoboken
Coleman, McA. 3 c 167 W. 73
Colligan, E. A. 4 t
in Ainslie, Bklyn.
Collins, C. M. pi
770 Eleventh ave., L. I. City
Colodny, I. ph 523 n, Bklyn.
Colton, H. E. 3 / 511 W. 122
Colton, I. H. c 116 and Broadway
Colton, R. 1 c
Rochelle Park, New Rochelle
Colwell, R. H. gr t 415 W. 118
Combes, Jr., A. C. 1 m
20 Elmhurst ave., Elmhurst, L. I.
Comin, R. pi
Beech St., Richmond Hill, L. I.
Commorato, J. R. 4 m
Compton, G. B. 3 c
181 Claremont ave.
Comstock, G. F. 3 s
125 Riverside Drive
Comstock, M. C. 4 c 536 W. 114
Conant, S. H. pi 526 W. 114
Condit, J. R. 4 t Whittier
Conger, A. D. c 412 W. 115
Conroy, M. S. I b
13 Tozvnsend ave., Stapleton
Consalus, F. H. 3 t
2035 Seventh ave.
Converse, M. 4 I Whittier
Cooder, C. M. 1 / Livingston
Cook, Jr., W. P. 4 s
mi Dean, Bklyn.
Coombs, H. C. I b
312 S. Broadway, Yonkers
Cooper, C. R. 2 b 223 W. 1 04
Cooper, C. S. ph 3 W. 29
Cook, E. H. 1 s
432 Central Park W.
Cooper, F. S. 2 c Hartley
Cooper, H. E. 4 t
218 Park ave., Yonkers
Cooper, H. R. phar Walden, N. Y.
Cooper, J. R. 2 s 325 Convent ave.
Copeland, R. 3 c
628 Washington ave., Bklyn.
Coplan, N. 1 / 533a 14, Bklyn.
Corbett, J. S. 3 c 915 Forest ave.
Corbin, A. M. 4 t ' Whittier
Corcoran, C. A. p 81 Bedford
Cordovez, 2 s Broadway and 137
Corlett, V. W. 2 / 22 E. 31
Cornell, J. H. / a Lawrence, N. Y.
Cornish, S. D. phar Carmel, N. Y.
Correll, E. H. 3 t Whittier
Corsa, H. P. 1 s 209 W. 108
Cort, A. gr t 408 W. 150
Corton, VVm. A. 2 c 850 Third ave.
Corwin, H. E. nm c 558 W. 113
Coss, J. J. ph 70a Park ave.
Counselman, T. B. 2 s 429 W. 117
Covello, L. 1 c 308 E. 113
Coveney, R. 3 b
8738 23rd ave., Bklyn.
Cowen, A. 4 c 39 E. 74
Covcen, E. D. 2 b 520 W. 122
Cowen, M. I. nm b 39 E. 74
Cowherd, J. B. 3 m Livingston
Cowie, R. / a Livingston
Coyne, M. A. 3 t
100 N. B'way, Yonkers
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
27
Coyle, C. I'. 3 t Glen Ridge, N. J.
Craig, C. R. 4 t Whittier
Craig, E. W. 3 b 3603 Broadway
Craig, P. G. ph Livingston
Crandell, H. H. I b
Hempstead, L. I.
Crane, B. H. 3 t
172 Glenridge ave., Moniclair
Crane, E. E. t 23 Locust, Flushing
Crane, T. H. 4 c 616 W. 114
Crawford, Jr., L. W. ph
435 W 123
Crawley, G. E. 4 s 557 W. 124
Crecelius, F. W. 4 s
Creighton, E, 3 t Whittier
Crew, C. 3 s Hartlev
Criado, R. F. 3 c 616 W. 116
Cronyn, G. W. 2 c 570 E. 140
Crooker, F. F. gr t
P. S. No. 6, Manhattan
Crooks, N. 3 t 416 W. 118
Crosby, C. F. 2 b 502 E. 138
Cross, B. A. 2 / Hartley
Croseman, H. L. 2 b
105 Clinton ave., Jamaica
Crouze, A. P. 2 c Bayside, L. I.
Croivell, M. B. 4 b
Richmond Hill, N. Y.
Cruden, G. 3 t
292 Garfield PL, Bklyn.
Culman, C. W. 3 c 476 W. 143
Cunningham, E. B. 4 t 604 W. 157
Curran, M. E. 3 b 207 W. 56
Currier, H. J. I b 330 W. 28
Curtis, C. D. ph 171 E. 83
Curtiss, E. E. d t Whittier
Cutler, Jr., C. W. 2 c 135 W. 76
Cutler, Jr., W. W. 3 *
902 West End ave.
Cutting, F. L. gr t 99 Java, Bklyn.
Cutting, V. W. 4 c 417 W. 117
JDargan, A. H. ph Whittier
Dailey, F. A. 4 t
138 Engle, Englevuood
Dalton, E. O. phar Hartley
Danehy, G. W. 3 s
1824 Anthony ave.
Danforth, C. R. 2 c 158 W. 86
Daniel, G. W. 2 s 441 W. 43
Daniels, C. W. 3 s Hartley
Daniels, M. E. 3 b 159 W. 83
Daniels, M. H. 2 s 35 W. in
Dann, M. E. 3 b
223 Berkeley ave., Bloomfield
Darby, W. L. pi
954 Boulevard, Astoria
Darlington, H. V. B. 2 c
80 S. 10, Bklyn.
Datar, A. N. pi Livingston
Davidow, L H. 1 c 55 W. 87
Davidson, M. E. S. 3 t 2728 B'way
Davidson, W. B. 3 c 565 W. 113
Davies, T. ph 3 Chelsea Sq.
Davimos, H. 2 c
236 Harrison ave, Harrison, N. J
Dav
Da^
Dav
Dav
Dav
Dav
Dav
Dav
Dav
Dav
Dav
Dav
Dav
s, A. pi Whittier
s, B. \c 3134 Broadway
s, Miss D. W. ph 130 W. 104
s, E. L. / a Livingston
s, E. M. phar 200 Broadway
F. R. 2 s 145 W. 5S
s, H. F. 3 s Hartley
s, J. K. 2 s 530 W. 113
s, J.H. 4t 136 E. 17
s, M. G. 4 t 414 W. 118
s, R. pi 700 Park ave.
Is, R. W. 3 t 634 W. 138
is, T. J. 2 s
700 West End ave.
Davis, W. H. ph 54° W. 145
Davis, W. W. pi Hartley
Dawkins, S. M. 2 I 94 Lawrence
Deacy, W. H. 3 t
Ossining-on-Hudson
Deacon, E. M. I b 5<>7 W. 142
Dean, H. A. 2 b Brooks
Dean, H. C. / a 12 W. 107
Debon, A. J. 1 m 100 W. 54
Debouy, C. K. 2 b 120 E. 53
Decker, K. A. 4 t 435 W. 123
Deevey, E. S. 2 c Livingston
de Garmenden, G. de C. 2 c
608 W. 113
Degavre, M. L. 1 s 55 8 W. 113
de Hierapolis, Jr., G. S. 2 s
356 W. 145
Deiser, N. A. 1 s
201 Keap, Bklyn.
de Jongh, A. F. 1 s 417 W. 117
Dellenbaugh, Jr., F. S. 2 s
627 W. 115
Demarest, I. C. 4 c
54 Essex, Hackensack
Demarest, M. C. 3 b Nanuet, N. Y.
Demcott, O. M. pi 700 Park ave.
Dement, L. W. 4 t Whittier
Demarest, W. J. 1 s 173 W. 93
Dempsey, J. A. V. 3 b
467 55, Bklyn
Denike, A.M. I b
22 Hamilton Terrace
Denison, I. N. 3 t 419 W. 121
Denton, E. 4 t 371 W. 123
28
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
DePasse, A. B. C. i m 506 E. 165
De Pew, P. H. 1 nm c
Nyack, N. Y.
Deschere, H. 2 j 334 W. 58
Deschere, P. R. 1 s 334 W. 58
Deutsch, H. A. 3 s 534 E. 87
Deusch, J. 3 t 69 First ave.
Devendorf, F. C. 2 m
De Hilton, R. L. 2 c 258 W. 127
De Walsh, F. C. ph 606 W. 135
DeWitt, S. R. 4 /
Kingsbridge, N. Y.
Dexheimer, L. M. 4 t 521 W. 122
Dhalla, M. V. ph Hartley
Diaz, M. is 94 W. 104
Dice, C. A. ph Madison, N. J.
Dickey, A. V. 3 t
no N. Fuller ton ave., Mt. Clair
Dickinson, H. N. ph
195 Kingston ave., Bklyn.
Dier, A. A. 4 s Hartley
Dieterich, D. D. I b
49 Claremont ave.
Dieterich, F. H. 2 m
910 Cauldwell ave.
Dillon, A. J. ph
905 Garden, Hoboken
di Moise, G. B. 2 s
Dingtvell, E. E. gr t Whittier
Distin, W. G. / a 276 W. 132
Dittmer, C. H. / a 520 W. 123
Dobbs, E. V. 3 t 523 W. 122
Dodd, F. F. pi 15 Wadsworth ave.
Dodd, R. ph 175 Ninth ave.
Dodge, M. I b
185 Berkeley PL, Bklyn.
Dodge, W. Earl nm s 99 John
Doernberg, W. S. 2 / 127 E. 95
Dol finger, E. 4. t Whittier
Dole, H. P. gr t Hartley
Dollar, F. V. 4 t Whittier
Donaldson, K. H. 1 s 309 W. 85
Donnelly, J. E. 2 ?n
2790 Marion ave.
Donohoe III., D. 1 s 558 W. 113
Donohoe, J. A. ph 151 W. 84
Donohue, Jr., J. H. 4 c 84 Grove
Donovan, J. 1 s 304 E. 79
Doremus, M. B. 2 c 558 W. 113
Dorland, B. B. 3 t
627 Kearny ave., Arlington, N. J.
Dorland, H. E. 1 j 620 W. 116
Dorn, Jr., G. H. 2 s 1630 Ave. A.
Dorr, W. C. 1 c
201 Sackett, Bklyn.
Dorsey, E. R. 1 / Livingston
Dotey, A. I. ph 14 W. 127
Doty, K. S. pi 553 W. 141
Doty, O. K. 4 s 553 W. 141
Dougherty, E. A. 2 s 244 W. 20
Dougherty, P. pi Hartley
Dow, F. B. 2 / Livingston
Doivnie, H. 3 t Whittier
Downs, F. G. 4 s
75 Fairview ave., Jersey City
Downs, I. R. 1 c
485 Decatur, Bklyn.
Downs, M. 2 b
75 Fairview ave., Jersey City
Dox, R. W. 2 / Hartley
Drain, D. D. 2 / Livingston
Dreyfuss, R. 2 s 201 W. 120
Driggs, K. H. phar Livingston
Driehaus, I. W. gr t
1 1 20 Amsterdam ave.
Driggs, S. B. nm c 243 W. 102
Druding, M. D. C. I b 144 W. 104
Dudley, L. E. 4 m 108 W. 64
Dudley, Ralph / a 417 W. 117
Duenas, H. 2 s 11 Broadway
Duffield, E. T. gr t Hartley
Dullam, E. P. 4 t Whittier
Dunbar, A. A. 3 t 519 W. 121
Dunbar, M. 3 t Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.
Duncan, A. I b IOI W. 85
Duncan, McH. 2 c
Pelham Manor, N. Y.
Duncan, M. H. t 532 W. 1 12
Dunham, S. R. pi Madison, N. J.
Dunlap, M. 4 t Whittier
Durant, D. 1 s 603 West End ave.
Duroe, V. E. 15 Kosciusko, Bklyn.
Dustin, E. G. 1 m 346 W. 57
Dwyer, C. E. 3 c
468 Riverside Drive
Divyer, D. T. I b
601 West End ave.
Dwyer, E. A. 4 t
477 Eighth, Bklyn.
Dwyer, G. J. 1 c
468 Riverside Drive
Dye, T. M. 1 / Livingston
Eadie, A. R. 2 c 202 W. 74
Edrhart, G. 4 t 430 W. 118
Earl, A.M. 4 t 866 West End ave.
Earle, T. 3 s 608 W. 113
Early, E. R. 1 / 520 W. 123
Eastman, H. W. 2 / Hartley
Eastman, M. M. 4 b 437 W. 123
Eastman, W. 4 c Hartley
Easton, K. 3 / 18 Gramercy Park
Eatman, D. gr t 503 W. 121
Eaton, C. C. 4 t 206 W. 39
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
29
Eaton, L. V. I b Brooks
Ebstone, H. A. nm c
551 Manhattan ave.
Echeverria, F. J. 3 m 248 VV. 76
Eckmann, J. 3 s 460 Grand
Eddison, W. 13. 1 c
Irvington, N. Y.
Eddy, E.S.2 b
19 W. 34, Bayonne, N. J.
Eddy, W. II. p 161 W. 140
Edeiblute, L. A. pi Chelsea Square
Edelman, S. phar 117 Ave. C
Edetis, O. L. 3 t Whittier
Edgar, G. C. 1 s 71 W. 92
Edgcomb, O. B. pi I W. 68
Edgell, F. D. p
665 Westminster Rd., Bklyn.
Edgerton, E. I. 4 t Hartley
Edmunds, A. G. ph 507 W. 138
Edwards, A. S. 4 t Hartley
Edwards, M. J. 4 t Whittier
Egan, R. S. 1 c 46 W. 120
Egbert, G. P. 1 c 425 W. 146
Egbert, H. D. 2 s 425 W. 146
Egelson, L. I. ph 531 W. 123
Eggleston,M. K. 2 b 43 Central ave.,
Tompkinsville, N. Y.
Egleston, L. H. 2 b Brooks
Ehnes, M. W. 156 Fifth ave.
Ehrenreich, S. 3 m 69 E. 101
Eichmann, M. 1 c
370 West, West Hoboken, N. J.
Eimer, C. B. 1 c 30 Irving pi.
Eimer, W. R. phar 30 Irving PI.
Eisler, S. m 90 Lenox ave.
Elder, M. F. 2 b 317 W. 25
Ellenwood, E. J. 2 / 205 Ross, Bklyn.
Elliott, C. H. gr t 411 W. 115
Elliott, E. D. B. 3 m 356 W. 57
Ellis, F. E. 2 / Livingston
Ellis, G. A. 3 / Livingston
Ellisson, E. J. I b
60 Prospect pi., Bklyn.
Elmore, R. B. ph 700 Park ave.
Elsasser, F. R. 2 c 302 W. 109
El ting, M. 114 E. 19
Eltzner, D. 4 b
26 Central ave., Tompkinsville
Emerson, E. M. ph
632 Bedford ave., Bklyn.
Emery, J. J. 3 t Whittier
Emery, M. E. 2 b
36 Avon ave., Newark
Emery, Stephen, p
412 Welling, Richmond Hill
Emsheimer, H. 3 m Livingston
Englander, H. s 270 W. 11S
Englehart, J. II. 2 c Madison ave.
Hotel, 92 & Madison ave.
English, J. T. 3 m 133 W. 64
I'. nk, Florence F. 2 b Brooks
Enoin, M. pi Whittier
Entelmann, J. 1 s
333 Alexander ave.
Epstein, A. 2 c
729 Greene ave., Bklyn.
Epstein, B. 2 c 1065 Second ave.
Epstein, L, 3 c
792 Greene ave, Bklyn.
Epstein, M. 4 c 1065 Second ave.
Ercolano, M. 1 s 444 W. 124
Erickson, P. E. pi 700 Park ave.
Ernst, F. C. 3 b 152 W. 122
Ernst, M. 1 c 152 W. 122
Erskine, R. S., 2 c 606 W. 113
Essig, F. T. 1 m 233 S. 7, Newark
Estee, R. G. 3 s 608 W. 113
Estrada, A. phar 37 W. 61
Estrada, S. 2 s
Etheridge, P. H. ph Whittier
Etler, J. phar 85 Mulberry
Evans, E. R. 3 m 361 W. 56
Evans, J. H. 3 m Montclair, N. J.
Evans, M. 3 t 500 W. 121
Evans, P. I. 4 t 515 W. 122
Everett, E. G. 4 b Suburban pi.
Everson, A. E. 4 t Whittier
Ezekiel, B. 3 s 49 W. 85
Faas, C. T. 1 s 544 W. 113
Fairbairn, R. L. 2 c
249 McDonough, Bklyn.
Falk, H. C. 3 b 1364 Lexington ave.
Falkowitz, H. C. 2 m
708 Ninth ave.
Fancher, E. M. 2 b New Brighton
Farnum, A. F. 4 t
65 Central Park West
Farr, Jr., T. W. Powers, 2 s
16 Lexington ave.
Farrell, C. D. 3 t
85 W. Grand, Rahvoay, N. J.
Farrell, J. R. 4 m 416 E. 158
Farrington, T. B. 3 s 614 W. 113
Farwell, Earle, 3 / Hartley
Fauver, E. 3 m 346 W. 57
Feagin, A. 4 t Whittier
Fedter, B. ph
223 Bedford Park Boulevard
Feigenbaum, W. M. pi
538 Hart, Bklyn.
Feinberg, B. G. p. 500 W. 123
Feitel, N. H. nm I Hartley
Felbel, F. J. 1 c 42 W. 87
3°
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Feldman, J. W. 4 m m E. 106
Feldstein, George, 2 m
162 Ave. C, care M. Robinson
Fellows, H. C. gr t Whittier
Felter, R. I. 4 s 558 W. 113
Feltus, Z. 3 b 211 Clinton
Fenton, H. P. nm b Lowerre
Summit Park, Yonkers, N. Y.
Fenner, C. N. p Paterson, N. J.
Ferguson, J. 1 s 60 W. 46
Ferguson, W. E. 3 s
2343 Old Broadway
Fernandez, F. M. 4 m 69 W. 95
Ferns, E. 4 t 346 Union ave.,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Ferrara, J, 1 c 142 Second ave.
Ferrari, R. A. ph 327 E. 116
Ferreira, A. V. 1 c
Prospect ave., Hackensack, N. J.
Ferrigan, M. S. 4 t 18 Jumel ter.
F err in, Miss F. A. 3 t 418 W. 1 18
Ferst, L. S. 2 c 1465 Fifth ave.
Fetzer, J. E. nm I Livingston
Feust, S. 2 j 462 E. 138
Fichaudler, A. pi 134 E. 101
Fiedler, Albert, 4 s 889 Greene ave.
Field, H. L. ph 608 W. 184
Field, N. C. 3 t 420 W. 121
Finkelstein, M. 1 s 349 E. 17
Finley, C. J. nm c
1580 Amsterdam ave.
Findeisen, William E. 3 m
223 Lenox rd., Bklyn.
Fine, G. B. 4 c
54 Pavonia ave., Arlington, N. J.
Firebaugh, B. H. 2 b 667 E. 163
Fish, J. B. p 423 Brook ave.
Fish, H. P. 4 c 31 W. 90
Fishel, D. E. 1 c 34 E. 76
Fisher, E. J. pi Hartley
Fisher, E. V. 4 t IQO Claremont ave.
Fisher, G. 4 t Whittier
Fitch, Geo. A. ph 700 Park ave.
Fitzpatrick, E. A. gr t 69 Pike
Flack, C. A. 4 b 265 Webster ave.,
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Flanagan, A. E. / a Hartley
Fleischer, E. p 468 12, Bklyn.
Fleischman, A. J. 1 / Livingston
Fleischmann, C. M. nm b
350 Manhattan ave.
Fleischman, L. S. 2 c 245 E. 48
Fleming, C. O. 2 b
SO E. 26, Bklyn.
Flexner, A. ph 66 E. 77
Flint, M. L. 2 b Wakefield
Floyd, C. H. 3 / Hartley
Flynn, O. R. gr t
Focht, M. ph Garden City, L. I.
Foeller, H. C. E. nm s 334 W. 47
Fogel, Jr., W. P. 1 s 413 W. 117
Folger, P. 2 / Livingston
Folsom, R. P. 4 m 328 W. 56
Fondiller, W. 3 s 182 Ninth ave.
Fonts, Jr., A. f a 210 W. 107
Fonts, H. 2 s 210 W. 107
Foote, E. W. 4 * 107 Macon, Bklyn.
Foote, H. 2 s 27 W. 46
Force, Jr., J. 1 c 505 W. 122
Ford, A. 3 / 17 W. in
Ford, A. J. 1 j
Ford, J. S. 2 m
\%y2 Burnet, Newark, N. J.
Ford, W. A. 3 j 22 S. Broadway,
White Plains, N. Y.
Forman, E. B. 3 t Whittier
Forman, E. S. phar
178 N. 7, Newark
Forman, R. L. pi 60 Seventh ave.
Forssell, A. E. 3 t 6 Castleton
ave., West Brighton, S. I.
Fortinash, P. J. 3 c 2166 2d ave.
Fosdick, H. E. pi Montclair, N. J.
Foshay, J. R. 3 m 166 W. 65
Fossas, E. J. 2 s 524 W 124
Foster, W. E. ph 51 E. 97
Foster, W. W. 1 c 427 Prudential
Building, Newark, N. J.
Fowler, R. H. 3 m 60 E. 68
Fowler, Jr., R. L. 3 c 26 W. 10
Fowler, S. ph 420 W 118
Fox, E. F. 4 b
80 Joralemon, Bklyn.
Fox, H. R. 2 b 622 W. 152
Fox, I. J. 3 c 127 E. 79
Fox, J. D. I b 338 War bur ton ave.,
Yonkers, N. Y.
Fox, K. A. 3 t 519 W. 124
Fox, O. A. nm c Livingston
Frachteuberg, L. J. ph.
Fraher, T. A. 4 s 254 W. 115
Frame, R. M. 2 b 27 So. 13 ave.,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Frank, A. 3 / Livingston
Frank, C. D. ph Hartley
Frank, M. 1 c 402 E. 79
Franke, C. E. gr t
10 Hudson Terrace, Tarrytown
Franke, G. M. 2 b
Bound Brook, N. J.
Frankfort, N. H. 1 c
1233 39, Bklyn.
Franklin, A. M. ph Collegiate
School, Passaic, N. J.
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
31
Francis, C. L. 4 t Whither
Fransioli, A. 3 b Brooks
Frapwell, A. p Morristown, N. J.
Fraser, L. 3 c 236 VV. 70
Frechette, M. 0. 4 t 163 W. 129
Freece, H. P. pi 156 Fifth ave.
Fredericks, \V. z s 3 Lewis,
Tompkinsville, S. I.
Freedman, L. 4 / 71 E. 109
Freeman, A. C. 2 m 365 W. 55
Frees, H. J. / a 612 E. 6
Frericks, E. V. 2 c 231 W. 115
Friedland, L. S. ph 22 E. 105
Friedman, I. i c 55 Osborn, Bklyn.
Friedman, M. 1 s 123 Henry
Friedson, M. 2 m 163 Stanton
Fries, J. F. 1 c
58a Madison, Bklyn.
Friess, L. L. 4 t 401 W. 117
Frink, M. H. 3 b 124 W. II
Frink, R. M. 2 / Hartley
Fris/ie, H. 4 i 522 W. 123
Frost, J. M. ph 79 Willed
Fuchs, H. H. / a 4S9 E. 141
Fuchs, S. A. p 129 W. n6
Fudji, Gilbert Jacques, / a
2224 Valentine ave.
Fueslein, V. A. I b 351 E. 77
Fuess, H. L. / a Livingston
Fuhrman, H. C. 2 m
1247 Ocean ave., Bklyn.
Fuld, H. A. 2 s 168 W. 86
Fulda, H. C. 4 m 107 Kent, Bklyn.
Fulton, C. H. 3 m 155 Lockwood
ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
Furman, B. A. 2 m
65 S. 10th, Newark, N. J.
Furmansky, J. J. 1 s
227 S 2, Bklyn.
Furst, S. 4 m 1044 Morris ave.
Gabriel, B. A. 1 /
Hotel Willard, W. 76
Gaebelein, P. W. 3 *
228 No. Fulton ave.
Gallatin, G. 3 / 444 Madison ave.
Galewski, A. 4 t 50 W. 119
Gait, S. E. 4 t Whittier
Galvin, W. A. 2 c 148 E. 55
Gambier, L. M. 3 t
351 Lexington ave.
Gamble, E. 4 t 539 W. 142
Gammon, S. M. 3 t 528 W. 123
Gannon, T. A. 2 c 619 W. 113
Gans, L. S. 1 c 52 W. 71
Garabedian, H. B. ph 8 E. 108
Garabedian, M. D. 2 c 419 W. 122
Gardiner, C. L. nm b 10 W. 1 03
Gardner, E. H. ph Livingston
Gardner, L. B. 2 s Hartley
Garlick, E. S. 3 t 34 Paterson
ave., Paterson, N. J.
Gamier, H. K. ph 175 Ninth ave.
Garrison, C. G. 4 t 545 W. 129
Garvey, Jr., R. 1 /
Waldorf-Astoria
Gascoyne, Jr., W. J. nm s
627 W. 115
Gatch, N. B. c Hartley
Gately, W. A. 1 s 125 E. 54
Gay, E. 3 b 205 IV. 106
Gay, K. I b 205 W. 1 06
Gee, O. P. 1 / 246 W. 72
Geer, Jr., W. M. 3 / 60 W. 84
Geist, S. H. 4 m 340 E. 194
Gelb, L. 4 m 283 Stanton
Gelbach, M. ph.
189 Claremont ave.
Gelder, R. W. 2 s 42 Broadway
Genin, M. 3 t 315 W. 83
Gere, L. B. ph. 430 W. 118
Gerig, J. L. ph
Gerrish, W. C. pi Hartley
Gerritson, M. B. 3 t Whittier
Gerstein, R. I b
130 Manhattan ave., Bklyn.
Gerstein, S. 1 c
130 Manhattan ave., Bklyn.
Gettler, A. O. 3 s
1475 Lexington ave.
Gianella, G. 3 t 608 Fifth, Bklyn.
Gibson, L. H. 3 c
40 Bleecker, Newark, N. J.
Gibson, M. L. 2 b 203 JV. 95
Gibson, V. R., 2 c 8 Van Sice
ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
Giegerich, A. -N. 2 c 267 E. 7
Giehl, J. A. ph
207 Summer ave., Ne-xvark
Gilbert, G. F. 4 c
1292 Amsterdam ave.
Gildersleeve, V. C. ph. 28 W. 48
Giegerich, Jr., L. A. c 267 E. 7
Gillespie, H. pi Madison, N. J.
Gillet, L. B. ph Hartley
Gilmer, E. E. gr t
1288 Amsterdam ave.
Ginsberg, I. 1 c 965 Grant ave.
Girdner, P. M. lb 47 W. 71
Giroux, L. M. 1 s Hotel
Ansonia, 73d & Broadway
Gleason, E. I b
239 Decatur, Bklyn.
Glen, H.R. 4 b ' 678 W. 114
32
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Glidden, M. M. 4 t
Pratt Institute, Bklyn.
Glorney, E. E. 2 s.
Gliick, E. ph 1590 Amsterdam ave.
Gluck, H. J. 2 c 53 Scholes, Bklyn.
Godfrey, L. B. 3 t.
Godley, M. F. 3 b Bayside, N. Y.
Goertner, R. pi 1225 Boston Road
Goetz, N. S. 2 / Hotel St. Lorenz
Gold, E. gr. t 16 W 117
Goldberg, G. 2 c
210 Lynch, Bklyn.
Goldberg, H. ph 263 W. 112
Goldberg, J. 3 b 125 W. 115
Goldberg, S. I. p. 167 E. 102
Goldberg, V. 2 m 2968 Briggs ave.
Goldblatt, H. M. 4 c 460 Grand
Golde, M. D. 4 b Brooks
Golden, H. 3 c 238 E. 53
Goldfarb, A. J. p 38 W. 116
Goldfarb, H. 2 s \z(>z 49, Bklyn.
Goldman, H. / a
83 St. Nicholas pi.
Goldrich, L. W. pi
946 St. Mark's ave., Bklyn.
Goldsmith, A. N. p
1 163 Washington ave.
Goldsmith, I. E. 1 c 53 W. 89
Goldstein, H. S. 1 c 64 E. 93
Goldstein, M. M. 2 s 158 W. 118
Goldstein, R. A. 3 c Livingston
Goldstein, S. 2 s 267 W. 113
Goldstone, Jr., L. P. 1 s
401 W. 118
Goldwasser, D. gr t 141 W. in
Gollomb, J. ph 126 E. 103
Golob, M. phar 328 E. 70
Goodfriend, H. 2 m 243 E. 72
Goodkind, M. 4 c 18 W. 112
Goodman, E. 4 c 106 W. 86
Goodman, S. L. 2 c
2x8 St. John's pi., Bklyn.
Goodspeed, G. C. ph
62 Columbia Heights, Bklyn.
Goodwin, E. ph. . 22s W. 30
Goodwin, E. C. 2 s 417 W. 117
Goodwin, E. L. 3 b
2647 Broadway
Goodwin, G. M. 3 c 54 Richmond
rd., Tompkinsville, S. I.
Goodwin, N. A. 1 m 225 W. 135
Gooldy, W. G. 3 / 526 W. 123
Gordon, A. M. 3 b 753 Jennings
Gordon, P. A. 2 / Hartley
Gorfinkle, J. I. ph 457 W. 123
Gossett, A. J. 3 m 209 W. 130
Gottlieb, A. 2 m 207 E. Broadway
Gottlieb, J. L. / a
1835 Madison ave.
Gottlieb, R. f a 1835 Madison ave.
Goudy, F. B. p 416 W. 118
Gould, J. 1 c 195 Broadway
Gould, K. 3 s 195 Broadway
Grace, R. V. 1 m 435 E. 141
Graef, E. A. f a 242 W. 1 16
Graham, H. R. 3 s 536 W. 114
Graham, S. P. ph 6 Howe ave.,
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Grant, A. A. 4 t 78 IV. 55
Grant, A. 3 t 545 W. 123
Grant, A. C. 3 b 81 Buena Vista
ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
Grant, E. 3 t 200 Claremont ave.
Grant, E. J. 3 c 6 E. 108
Grant, L. E. 3 s Livingston
Grassi, W. H. c
28 Edgecombe ave.
Gratigny, R. K. p.
Graves, A. C. 4 m 113 Water
Gray, C. 4 s 206 W. 119
Gray, C. ph Q77 Lexington ave.
Gray, C. P. nm I Livingston
Gray, H. Y. 4 b
246 Fourteenth, Bklyn.
Gray, J. E. 3 c,
246 Fourteenth, Bklyn, N. Y.
Gray, J. H. 4 m 153 E. 86
Gray, J. W. 1 m 138 Clinton ave.,
Newark, N. J.
Gray, T. T. nm s 415 Morris
ave, Elizabeth, N. J.
Green, E. M. 3 t 522 W. 123
Green, H. C. pi
Green, T. ph Livingston
Greenawalt, L. de F. I b Brooks
Greenberg, A. B. / a 5 E. 115
Greenberg, L. 4 m 1 135 46, Bklyn.
Greenewald, R. J. 3 t
131 St. James PL, Bklyn.
Greenough, W. E. 2 s 530 W. 123
Greenwood, D. G. 4 t Whittier
Greenwood, S. B. phar
389 Broad, Newark
Greer, F. ph
494 Washington ave., Bklyn.
Gref, W. H. 1 s 565 W. 113
Gregg, R. E. 3 t 176 W. 82
Gregory, L. H. p. Whittier
Greift, L. J. I b 166 W. 79
Grendon, F. ph 3130 Broadway
Grewe, J. 2 s Hartley
Gries, J. M. pi 184 Eldridge
Griffen, E. B. 2 s 340 W. 90
Griffin, E. F. 4 c Livingston^
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
33
Griffin, H. C. p Hartley
Griffin, P. F. 3 c
324 75, Bay Ridge, L. I.
Griffith, P. ph 190 Claremont ave.
Gross, H. I. p
93 Buffalo ave., Bklyn.
Grossbaum, L. 1 c
2646 Marion ave.
Grossman, J. B. 4 c 104 W. 115
G rover, I. A. 4. t
Gruenstein, F. nm b 60 W. 95
Guebin, L. ph Packer Collegiate
Institute, Bklyn.
Guernsey, J. E. 3 t 500 W. 121
Guggenheim, 4 c 29 W. 76
Guiterman, K. S. 2 s Livingston
Guiteras, H. G. s
1 Livingston ave., Yonkers
Guiteras, J. G. 1 s
1 Livingston ave., Yonkers
Guiteras, J. R. 1 s
1 Livingston ave., Yonkers
Gulliver, H. G. 2 c
952 St. Nicholas ave.
Gunther, A. 2 c 351 Halsey, Bklyn.
Gunther, G. P. f a
Marion ave. & 201
Guthorn, S. 2 s 103 E. 123
Guthrie, W. B. pi C. C. N. Y.
Gutierrez de Celis, T. R. 1 s
102 E. 15
Gutman, M. 3 c
1070 Madison ave.
Guynm, E. H. ph Ridgefield, N. J.
Gwinn, R. 3 / 606 W. 113
Haake, C. H. G. 1 m 210 W. 109
Haas, E. 4 t 12 Prospect Dr.,
Yonkers, N. Y.
Haas, E. M. nm I 248 E. 7
Haas, G. C. O. ph 64 E. 7
Haber, I. 1 c J46 Angelique,
West Hoboken, N. J.
Hackett, K. 4 t 419 W. 118
Hassler, L. H. ph Whittier
Hogemann, R. H. Jr., 4 c
288 Johnson
Hayman, Jacob pi Hartley
Hahn, R. 3 c Livingston
Haigh, C. S. 3 s 565 W. 113
Haight, A. C. / a Hartley
Haines, F. M. 2 c
50 Central Park W.
Haithwaite, C. I b
342 Ninth, Bklyn.
Hakes, M. 4 t 220 Riverside Dr.
Hakes, R. J. I b 220 Riverside Dr.
Halamka, LeR. M. nm e 418 E. 84
Hale, Jr., F. 3 m 356 \V. 57
Hale, J. C. 1 s Livingston
Hall, A. E. 1 s 526 W. 122
Hall, B. K. / a Hartley
Hall, C. L. 4 s 419 W. 118
Hall, F. 1 m Livingston
Hall, H. E. 3 s 429 W. 117
Hall, H. M. ph 17 W. 63
Hall, T. 3 b 18 Summit ave.,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Hall, W. P. pi 531 W. 113
Hallev, W. M. / a 1014 E. 175
Hallock, E. M. 3 t
105 Court, Newark, N. J.
Hallock, F. A. p 36 E. 65
Hallock, F. B. 2 s 210 W. 133
Halpern, M. pi 27 W. 112
Halsey, R. P. 3 c Hartley
Halstead, H. H. ph 137 \V. 104
Ham, E. O. ph 700 Park ave.
Hamburger, N. F. 2 b 151 W. 140
Hamburger, P. J. 1 c 230 W. 107
Hamann, A. M. 2 s 118 Urban,
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Ham el, G. 3 t 276 Broad,
Newark, N. J.
Hamil, M. E. 3 b Brooks
Hamilton, E. L. t
190 W adsworth ave.
Hamilton, J. L. phar
Hamilton, S. 2 / Englewood, N. J.
Hamm, F. P. 3 t Hartley
Hammond, H. O. 2 s 608 W. 113
Hauch, E. F. ph Livingston
Handelsman, S. 1 c
307-9 Wallabout, Bklyn.
Haner, C, Jr. 1 s 147 W. 105
Haney, J. D. gr t 416 W. 118
Hangarter, A. H. 4 m
200 Stagg, Bklyn.
Hanhausen, F. 2 s Hartley
Hanigan, H. A. 2 s 119 W. 70
Hanke, A. G. 2 3 s Livingston
Hanke, E. ph Hartley
Hankins, F. H. pi 624 W. 139
Hanley, K. V. I b 607 W. 116
Hannah, F. ph Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Hansford, F. P. 3 t 215 E. 15
Hanson, G. C. 3 c
47 Rochester ave.
Harcourt, N. 4 t 151 W. 105
Harder, E. I b 607 W. 1 16
Harder, E. H. 1 s
154 N. 9th, Newark, N. J.
Hardivick, M. nm b Brooks
Hardy, H. E. ph Brooks
34
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Hardy, R. G. 3 b
157 Willow, Bklyn.
Hare, R. I. 1 / 528 W. 123
Harlam, E. J. 4 c 611 VV. 114
Harowitz, P. / a
106 Franklin, Bklyn.
Harper, J. II. Jr. 1 s
116 and Riverside Dr.
Harrington, G. A. gr t Whittier
Harrisson, M. E. 3 b Brooks
Harson, H. N. 3 c 329 W. 51
Hart, E. H. 1 /
377 Sterling PL, Bklyn.
Hart, M. T. I b 618 W. 114
Hart, N. B. 2 c
222 Van Buren, Bklyn.
Hart, R. E. fa 356 W. 58
Hartman, H. V. / a 325 Hartley
Hartman, Lois K. gr t Whittier
Hartog, V. s 605 W. 113
Hartung, E. W. 1 c 774 E. 169
Hartwig, F. J. fa
724 Hudson, Hoboken, N. J.
Hartzell, A. M. C. 4 t Whittier
Harrat, F. T. fa 453 W. 155
Harrigan, M. 3 t Hartley
Harrington, Evalina, 4 t Whittier
Harris, D. B. 1 c 229 Bowery
Harris, J. J. 3 t Whittier
Harris, S. C. 4 t 511 W. 122
Harrison, A. 4 t Chatham, N. J.
Harrison, E. S. ph.
1479 Dean, Bklyn.
Harrisson, L. ph 397 Gates, Bklyn.
Harvitt, H. J. ph
192 Hooper, Bklyn.
Haskell, A. 4 t Whittier
Haskell, J. ph 203 W. ic8
Hassebrock, M. M. 4 t
3S7 Lenox a<ve.
Hastings, E. I. 3 b 119 E. 86
Hastings, W. H. Jr. 1 f 119 E. 86
Hathaway, G. B. pi 605 W. 115
Hanrahan, J. G. 3 c 352 W. 117
Hauser, G. D. nm c 14 E. 87
Hauser, T. O. 4 c 616 W. 114
Hawkins, A. C. 3 / Sewaren, N. J.
Hawley, G. f a Hartley
Haxby, R. V. L. / a 612 W. 115
Hay, W. W. 2 / 157 W. 123
Hayes, A. G. 4 t Whittier
Hayes, F. A. 3 s Hartley
Hayes, F. H. Jr. 2 s
772 St. Nicholas ave.
Hayes, M. E. 4 t 4 Manhattan ave.
Haynes, A. F. gr. t 126 Palisade
ave., Engleivood, N. J.
Hays, B. R. I b 9 W. 121
Hayward, A. S. ph 412 Ninth ave.
Hayward, V. S. 4 m 531 W. 179
Hazzard, L. F. 1 s Livingston
Healy, F. M. 4 t
20 Hampton PL, Bklyn.
Healy, T. F. 2 c 141 W. 90
Heaphy, G. M. 4 t 256 W. 108
Heard, W. S. 2 c Hartley
Heaton, D. R. P. 3 m 25 W. 36
Heatwole, C. J. 4 t 423 W. 118
Hebberd, E. A. 3 b
1040 79 Bklyn.
Hecker, J. H. phar 329 E. 87
Hedges, A. 4 t 402 W. J 24
Hedges, J. S. 1 c 272 W. 86
Hedley, H. W. 3 b
2768 Morris ave.
Hehre, F. W. 4 s
105 Manhattan ave.
Heidelberger, M. 3 c 38 W. 93
Heiden, I. F. I b Il8 E. 74
Heidenreich, W. L. 3 s
63 Turner pi., Bklyn.
Heidgerd, H. W. 1 / 142 W. 122
Heim, L. 4 b 143 W. 119
Heimann, E. nm b 31$ W. 105
Heinick, F. R. 2 /
164 Manhattan ave.
Heller, E. 2 b 21 W. 90
Heller, M. E. 3 t Whittier
Heller, W. T. gr t
1758 Madison ave.
Hellin, E. B. 3 b 9 Columbus ave.
Hellin, L. ph 9 Columbus ave.
Helmrich, E. W. 4 b
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Helmrich, G. L. 3 s
Henderson, E. M. 4 t
285 St. Nicholas ave.
Henderson, G. 2 b
Eastern Blvd., Westchester
Henderson, G. H. Jr. 2 c
116 st. & Riverside Drive
Henderson, N. 4 t 27 E. 65
Henderson, N. 3 t 415 W. 57
Hendrian, A. W. t 153 E. 86
Hendricks, E. ph 18 E. 80
Henes, E., Jr. m 128 E. 93
Henes, H. W. 3 s 128 E. 93
Hendricks, W. A. ph 700 Park ave.
Henriques, M. C. p 476 W. 141
Henry D. I b Yonkers, N. Y.
Henry, J. M. ph 700 Park ave.
Herbermann, C. G. Jr. 4 m
346 Convent ave.
Herbert, W. D. 1 s 434 W. 22
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Herman, M. M. i / Livingston
Herrick, H. T. s 310 W. 95
Herrig, A. B. 4 t 521 W. 122
Herrmann, A. 4 c 234 E. 72
Herrmann, A. L. I b
1224. Union ave.
Herrmann, M. T. 2 b 112 E. 65
Herrmann, H.St 58 E. 124
Herrmann, S. ph 147 W. 103
Hershenstein, C. 3 c Livingston
Hershenstein, S. nm c Livingston
Hersh field, A. L. 4 b 159 E. 64
Hershkopf, B. 2 / 36 Attorney
Hcrter, A. H. 1 s
1 741 Topping ave.
Herts, B. R. 4 c 69 W. 89
Herts, H. H. 3 c
Rockingham, 56 st. & Broadway
Hertzog, H. S. 1 s 510 W. 146
Hertzog, W. S. pi 510 W. 146
Herzfeld, M. G. 1 m 210 W. 128
Herzog, D. S. 2 s
772 St. Nicholas ave.
Hess, B. M. 3 t 530 W. 123
Hess, M. H. 4 c 244 W. 85
Hess, W. L. gr t
344 Lafayette ave., Bklvn.
Hetzel, J. F. 3 t Whither
Heumann, E. M. 2 s 251 W. 137
Heuermann, H. F. ph 101 Beach
Stapleton, S. I.
Hevesh, J. ph 531 W. 123
Hewitt, R. H. 3 m 129 W. 64
Heydecker, W. D. 1 c
137 Franklin ave., Mt. Vernon
Heynich, R. O. ph 714 Lincoln
PI., Bklyn.
Heyward, N. B. 1 m
Hickenlooper, G. f a Livingston
Hicks, C. S. 1 s 217 Livingston
Higbie, E. D. 2 s 158 W. 76
Higgins, E. p Livingston
Higgins, F. A. 4 c 415 W. 146
Hildreth, W. W. 2 m 22 W. 60
Hill, A. D. 2 b 537 W. 121
Hill, A. T. I b 783 Greene ave.,
Bklyn.
Hill, D. 2 c 323 W. 87
Hill. J. F. 1 m 153 W. 61
Hill, L. B. gr t Livingston
Hill, L. O. 1 s 64 W. 88
Hill, J. W. 1 c
268 Stuyvesant ave., Bklyn.
Hill, W. C. 1 s 984 Trinity ave.
Hillman, J. A. 1 c 134 E. 19
Hinck, C. F., Jr. 3 c 565 W. 113
Hinkel, Edw. J. 2 J 329 E. 68
Hinman, Edward, Jr. 2 c
Riverside Dr. and 116
Hinshelivood, M. 3 t
Hirata, A. / 2036 Fifth ave.
Hirsch, C. M. 1 s 445 W. 162
Hirsch, G. J. 1 / 1361 Madison ave.
Hirschensohn, E. ph
322 Park ave., Hoboken, N. J.
Hirschensohn, N. ph
322 Park ave., Hoboken, N. J.
Hirsdansky, S. gr t 1028 Faile
Hirsh, A. ph 531-5 W. 123
Hirsh, M. lb 25 W. 87
Hirsh, R. T. 2 s 161 W. 76
Hitchcock, C. D. 4 t Whittier
Hoag, J. A. 3 j 558 W. 113
Hoag, L. H. / a Bronxwood
Park, Williamsbridge, N Y.
Hoass, C. T. Jr., 1 s 308 W. 93
Hobbs, A. L. 1 m 28 Evergreen
PL, East Orange, N. J.
Hochberger, Julius 1 s
472 Central Park West
Hochberger, O. 2 c
472 Central Park West
Hochheimer, H. A. 4 t
1311 Madison ave.
Hochstadter, I. 3 / 216 W. 139
Hochheimer, R. 3 b
1311 Madison ave.
Hoage, C. W. nm b 316 W. 108
Hodge, C. M. nm b 316 W. 108
Hodge, H. L. 4 t Whittier
Hodgetts, A. S. ph
190 Van A 1st ave., L. I. City
Hodgkinson, H. H. 2 s 608 W. 113
Hodsdon, E. W. 3 b
190 Harrison ave., Jersey City
Hoermann, M. 3 b
1208 Bloomfield, Hoboken, N. J.
Hoffmann, I. N. pi 136 W. 16
Hoffman, J. M. 1 s 120 E. 28
Hofheimer, A. 3 m 313 W. 106
Holbrook, C. H. ph 700 Park ave.
Holbrook, N. 1 c 554 W. 14a
Halcomb, C. H. Jr., 2 s
Yale Club, W. 42
Holderer, G. B. 3 s Livingston
Hollenbeck, J. S. nm c Hartley
Hollister, E. M. 4 t Whittier
Hollister, S. T. 4 c 61 E. 91
Holm, A. S. 3 b The Westminster,
Perth Amboy, N. J.
Holmgren, A. nm b Brooks
Holman, A. J. 1 j 1364 Teller ave.
Holman, B. F. 3 t Whittier
Holt, C. M. p Whittier
36
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Holtzoff, A. 4 c 2577 Eighth ave.
Hooper, M. L. 3 t Whittier
Holsleg, C. J. 4 s
225 N. James, Peekskill, N. Y.
Holzman, B. 2 b 32 Ave. C.
Holzwasser, F. I b 215 W. 135
Holzworth, J. M. 2 c 505 W. 122
Honda, M. ph 463 Manhattan ave.
Hopping, A. T. 1 / 532 IV. 114
Hopkins, M. A. ph 58 IV. 104
Hopewell, F. I. 2 b
532 Broadway, Flushing, L. I.
Hopewell, S. L. 2 b
532 Broadway, Flushing, L. I.
Hopping, H. H. 3 c 532 W. 114
Home, E. R. 4 t
Horowitz, B, 1 j 74 E. 114
Hoster, M. T. 4 s 40 Prospect
Terrace, E. Rutherford, N. J.
House, H. D. p
Botanical Garden, Bronx Park
House, J. W. Jr. 1 / Livingston
Houston, A. 2 / 417 W. 117
Houston, J. F. 4 t
32 Ward, Orange, N. J.
Hover, D. L. C. 2 s 1 Teasdale Pi.
Howe, C. H. 3 s 100 W. 118
Howe, H. B. pi 700 Park ave.
Howe, W. E. ph 175 Ninth ave.
Howard, F. L. 4 t Whittier
Howard, I. M. 3 t Whittier
Howell, 'J. V. 1 c
507 Manhattan ave.
Howell, R. 3 / 2030 Broadway
Howland, Geo. F. 3 / 40 W. 129
Hoykendorf, K. nm s
2340 Seventh ave.
Hoyns, G. W. 4 s 607 W. 113
Hoyt, H. L. Jr. 2 s 9 W. 32
Hoyt, H. S. 2 b Nutley, N. J.
Hoyt, N. S. 4 c
Hotel Regent, 70 St. & B'way.
Hovt, R. E. 2 m 15 Gramercy Park
Hoyt, S. F. pji 17 E. 95
Hsu, S. C. C. r s Livingston
Hubbard, E. W. 1 s
597 Madison, Bklyn.
Hubbard, J. F. W. 3 b
1 Harrison, Bloomfield, Ar. J.
Hubbard, M. B. 4 t Whittier
Hubbard, R. H. 1 m 138 W. 74
Hubbard, T. B. 2 m 25 W. 65
Hubbell, A. H. 4 s
485 Marlborough Rd., Bklvn.
Hubbell, L. B. ph 48 W. 82
Huber, J. C. Jr. / a 557 W. 124
Hudson, C. A. 1 c 1 E. 76
Hudson, C. E.' 3 t
157 Franklin, Astoria, L. I.
Hudson, H. K. 4 s 627 W. 115
Hufeland, E. 4 t
121 N. High, ML Vernon, N. Y.
Hufeland, M. F. 4 t
121 N High, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Hughes, H. D. / a Hartley
Hulst, Y. D. pi 700 Park ave.
Humann, O. V. 4 t 26 W. 22
Hume, H. G. 3 s Livingston
Humphrey, J. A. 4 t Whittier
Humfeld, E. W. 4 t 50? IV. 124
Humphreys, G. H. 4 m 78 W. 85
Hunsdon, E. C. 4 b 43 Liberty
ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
Hunt, A. P. ph 1 Chelsea Square
Hunt, C. W. Jr. 3 c 171 W. 88
Hunt, J. Jay 4 m 402 W. 58
Hunter, G. C. pi 700 Park ave.
Hunter, G. L. 2 b Brooks
Huntington, S. D. gr t 419 IV. 118
Huntzicker, F. J. 3 s 605 W. 113
Hurley, M. L. 4 s Hotel Belmont
Hutchins, A. P. 3 t 515 IV. Ill
Hutchinson, E. J. pi
287 Carroll, Bklyn.
Hutchinson, G. E. 3 s 51 W. 95
Huth, C. F., Jr. pi 557 W. 124
Huttlinger, C. F. 2 c
771 Carroll, Bklvn.
Huttmann, M. A. pi 417 IV. 118
Huvler, C. D. nm s 301 W. 72
Hyde, B. E. 4 t Whittier
Hyde, C. E. 3 m Hartley
Hyde, J. E. p §21 W. 121
Hyde, M. G. f a
212 Garfield PL, Bklyn.
Hyman, J. 1 c 310 Madison
Hyman, M. 3 / m E. 81
Hyman, S. L. / a 611 Livingson
I;hinose, G. pi 41 E. 19
Ihlseng, 0. K. I b 541 W. 124
111, E. A. 2 m 350 W. 71
Inagaki, Y. pi 175 Ninth ave.
Ingalls, F. M. 3 b 153 W. 80
In galls, H. A. 4 t Whittier
Ingle, J. W. Jr. / a 537 W. 149
Ingraham, O. pi
444 Clinton ave., Bklyn.
Intemann, A. C. 1 / 27 Bank
Ioki, T. pi 64 E. 133
Ireland, E. W. 4 t
513 7 St., College Pt, L. I.
Irving, S. 3 t 921 St. Nicholas ave..
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
7
Isham, A. F. ph
Isaacs, C. A. p
Isaacs, S. S. 3 /
Iseman, P. R. i j
Ishimura, S. />//
Itakura, T. nm I
Ivimey, E. M. 3 b
3089
Ivimey, M. R. 2 b
3089
Ives, F. L. 2 s
Ives, P. ph
Livingston
Livingston
51 E. 96
1 1 5 W. 131
60 Wall
516 W. 122
Decatur ave.
Decatur ave.
117 E. 30
43 W. 69
Jabine, W. 1 /
9 Morris Crescent, Yonkers
Jackson, A. M. 3 t 222 E. 115
Jackson, E. H. 4 t 522 W. 123
Jackson, G. G. Jr. 1 s 255 W. 97
Jackson, G. L. gr t 419 W. 117
Jackson, J. A., Jr. 2 m 23 W. 65
Jackson, L. 2 / 148 W. 125
Jacobson, S. L. 4. t 602 W. 135
Jackson, V. I b 966 E. 167
Jacobs, L. ph 28 Second PI., Bklyn.
Jacobs, P. P. pi Madison, N. J.
Jaggard, A. G. 3 b
575 Bedford ave., Bklyn.
Jabelka, R. f a Elmhurst, L. I.
Jahn, G. A. 3 s
1926 Albermarle Rd., Bklyn.
James, R. T. ph 417 W. 1 18
Jansen, F. C. 1 s 544 W. 115
Jansen, W. 4 t 2233 Belmont ave.
Janvrin, E. R. P. 3 m
191 Madison ave.
Jaques, G. W. Jr. 4 c
112 W. Jersey, Elizabeth, N. J.
Jaques, M. V. 2 b
112 W. Jersey, Elizabeth, N. J.
Jaques, W. S. 1 s 558 W. 113
Jaros, A. L. Jr. 1 s 2345 B'way.
Jeanneret, L. E. is
60 Everett PL, Rutherford, N. J.
Jefferson, I. D. 4 t 510 W. 135
Jeidell, H. 4 b Brooks
Jenkins, H. B. 1 s
282 Manhattan ave.
Jenkins, R. C. c 300 W. 109
Jenner, W. A. t 511 W. 122
Jenney, B. 4 t 378 West End ave.
Jennings, C. M. p 503 W. 121
Jennings, E. A. 1 m 346 W. 57
Jennings, R. C. pJiar
292 Springfield ave., Summit
Jessup, D. W. 3 s 413 W. 117
Jessup, H. F. 3 t 522 W. 123
Jevjell, I. E. gr t 431 W. 121
Jinishian, A. J. 4 / 151 W. 117
Joerg, A. N. 2 c
531 Beech, Richmond Hill
Johnson, A. H. ph 51 1 W. 122
Johnson, A. L. gr t
205 Miln, Crawford, N. J.
Johnson, E. F. 3_t Whittier
Johnson, F. / a
Upper Montclair, 450 Park
Johnson, H., Jr. / a Hartley
Johnson, L. A. /
223 Lincoln PI., Bklyn.
Johnson, L. E. I b 460 W. 152
Johnson, M. H. 4 t Whittier
Johnson, P. D. 3 b 120 W. II
Johnson, T. J. A. 4 m 203 W. 33
Johnson, W. A. p
157 N. Seventh, Newark, N. J.
Johnson, W. C. 3 m 231 W. 69
Johnston, M. A. I b
774 West End ave.
Joiner, F. I. I b 469 W. 1 52
Jollon, A. J. 2 /
125 Vernon ave., Bklyn.
Jones, A. M. 4 t Whittier
Jones, C. R. 3 c Livingston
Jones, E. 2 / 222 Madison ave.
Jones, E. C. 4 s
Riverside Drive & 116
Jones, G. G. 1 m 157 W. 81
Jones, J. D. 2 c 881 Third ave.
Jones, L. M. 4 s 143 W. 129
Jones, M. E. 4 t
23 Hill, Newark, N. J.
Jones, M. M. 4 i 500 W. 121
Jones, S. M. 3 t Whittier
Jones, W. B. 2 s 404 E. 141
Jones, W. F. gr t 235 W. 132
Jordan, C. P. 2 s
302 Central Park, W.
Josephi, E. 3 b 321 Riverside Dr.
Josey, E. B. 2 / Livingston
Jouard, F. L. p 221 W. 49
Joyce, W. L. nm c Livingston
Judd, E. F. 3 t Livingston
Judson, L. 2 / 731 Elton ave.
Kahle, H. / a 612 W. 116
Kahn, L. ph 24 St. Marks PI.
Kandel, C. 1 s 22 First ave.
Kantor, J. L. 3 c 492 E. 142
Karnopp, C. F. pl 3 W. 29
Karr, G. gr t
1 120 Amsterdam ave.
Katibah, S. I. phar 24 Rector
Katz, E. J. 3 c 249 E. 68
3&
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Katzenstein, C. J. i /
14 Morningside ave.
Kaufman, J. H. 3 b I W. 94
Kaufmann, H. L. nm b 46 E. 83
Kayser, C. E. 3 c 71 E. 87
Kayser, R. B. 1 c 137 W. 94
Keagey, E. ph 137 W. HI
Keating, W. V. 4 t
258 Franklin ave., Bklyn.
Keator, R. M. 2 s
543 Madison ave.
Keller, J. J. gr t 1328 C his holm
Kelley, W. E. 1 /
116 & Seventh ave.
Kellogg, W. A. Jr. 4 <: 104 W. 58
Kells, L. C. 2 /
Kellsey, J. D. 3 t Englewood, N. J.
Kelly, E. E. 3 c
1088 Lafayette ave, Bklyn.
Kelly, K. H. 4 t Whittier
Kemp, N. C. B. pi Livingston
Kelly, M. S. 4 t 147 W. 126
Kemble, D. E. phar
381 Madison, Bklyn.
Kempf, E. M. 3 t
114 Park ave., Newark, N. J.
Kempton, E. M. I b Yonkers
Kendall, E. C. 4 j 531 W. 113
Kendler, J. 3 / 5 E. 105
Kemna, C. 3 t Larchmont, N. Y.
Kennedy, C. F. 3 c 302 E. 88
Kennedy, F. W. 3 s
758 Ave. A., Bayonne
Kennedy, M. M. ph 313 W. 23
Kennedy, W. W. 2 s 15 W. 73
Kenney, M. F. 3 b
358 E. 2d, Plainfield
Kent, A. R. gr t Madison, N. J.
Kenyon, H. R. / a 295 E. 8
Kerley, J. H. 3 c
350 Lafayette ave., Bklyn.
Kernan, C. W. 1 / Hartley
Kerner, A. M. 4 b
27 Woodlawn ave., Jersey City
Kerr, L. 3 b 103 and Broadway
Ketchum, R. S. 1 c
667 Teasdale PI.
Keyser, H. J. ph Chelsea Sq.
Kibbe, W. J. ph 5 W. 125
Kiendl, T. Jr. 2 c
105 Pennsylvania ave., Bklyn.
Kimball, R. 3 t
$21 N. Broad, Elizabeth, N. J.
Kimbel, W. A. 3 c 320 W. 104
Kimura, T. p
King, C. B. 3 / 521 W. 122
King, E. M. C. f a 69 W. 94
King, M. B. 3 b 798 Valley
Rd., Upper Montclair
King, M. H. 3 t
1249 Amsterdam ave.
King, O. J. I b 69 W. 94
King, T. E. 1 s 605 W. 113
Kingsbury, A. P. nm t 413 W. 46
Kingsbury, E. J. phar
122 W. Main, Little Falls
Kingsbury, 4 t Hartley
Kingsbury, L. C. 4 t 430 W. 122
Kilmer, A. J. 4 c 558 W. 113
Kilpatrick, W. H. gr t Livingston
Kiroe, Edwin pi 364 W. 118
Kinney, W. 1 c 19 W. 54
Kinsman, R. E. is 348 W. 87
Kirby, R. T. 2 c
54 Morningside Drive, W.
Kirby, V. R. 4 t Whittier
Kirchberger, E. 4 t 186 W. 135
Kirchivey, D. B. 2 b
908 St. Nicholas ave.
Kirkley, F. 3 t Whittier
Kirschberg, M. 1 s 30 W. 128
Kirtley, L. L. 4 s Livingston
Kiser, F. G. 4 c
128 Bloomfield ave., Newark
Kislowsky, A. D. 1 s 5 W. 125
Kistler, L. G. 3 c 429 W. 17
Kitson, H. W. 3 s 202 W. 74
Klapper, Paul, pi
386 St. Nicholas ave.
Kleeberg, Gordon S. P. pi
3 Riverside Drive
Klein, C. L. 4 t 3602 Third ave.
Klein, E. 262 W. 131
Klein, L. 2 c 105 W. 136
Klein, L. 2 c 57 Seventh
Klein, M. I. 4 b Floral Park, L. I.
Klein, W. / a
214 33, Woodcliff, N. J.
Kleinberg, S. 4 m
43 Humboldt, Bklyn.
Klepetko, E. 2 c
302 Central Park W.
Klepper, N. R. 1 / Livingston
Kloster, V. E. 3 b
215 St. John's PL, Bklyn.
Klugescheid, R. C. 1 c 170 W. 89
Knapp, E. S. 4 t Yonkers
Knapp, G. A. / a 401 W. 117
Knapp, H. O. 3 s 35 W. 75
Knapp, R. P. 1 m
Ninth and Sixth aves.
Kneisly, G. W. p 619 W. 113
Knickerbocker, W. E. ph 23 W. 129
Knirfin, H. R. / a 241 W. 109
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
39
Knight, J. J. f a 607 W. 113
Knight, N. f a 135 W. 142
Kobbe, F. W. 1 / 142 E. 18
Knobloch, E. 3 J Englewood, N. J.
Koeberlin, F. R. /> Livingston
Koehler, B. K. 3 t
84 Kip ave., Rutherford, N. J.
Koenig, L. 1 c 80 W. 12
Kohlberg, H. S. 3 s Hartley
Kohler, F. D. 2 c 616 W. 114
Kolni, L. p/i II38 Madison ave.
Koken, W. T. 3 j-
936 West End ave.
Koller, M, A. 1 j
1648 Amsterdam ave.
Koo, V. K. W. 3 c Hartley
Korey, A. J. gr t 1712 78, Bklyn.
Korn, A. R. pi 45 E. 74
Korn, H. pi 45 E. 74
Korn, S. S. 1 c 238 E. 6%
Kozminsky, L. M. 3 s Livingston
Kraft, Jr., P. 2 c 919 Ogden ave.
Kraft, W. J. / a
Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Kramer, I. G. 4 m 127 W. 117
Kranz, J. P. pi 184 Eldridge
Krapf, E. F. phar
1227 Madison ave.
Kraus, A. 4 s 508 E. 89
Krauss, F. I. 3 m
Washington Pi., E. Orange
Kreiner, L. M. 4 t
224. Broad, Newark
Krenning, E. A. ph Whittier
Krinsky, M. L. 1 c
309 Bushwick ave., Bklyn.
Krivulin, H. *r\. 3 s 75 E. 120
Kroger, H. A. 3 s Spuyten Duyvil
Kroeger, H. B. 2 c 228 E. 79
Kronberg, K. J. I b
2Q Lenox ave., White Plains, N. Y.
Kronman, D. E. 2 c 51 W. 114
Kropff, A. H. p 136 W. 119
Kudlich, B. R. 3 c 153 W. 21
Kudlich, Jr., H. F. 3 s 153 W. 21
Kuesel, A. E. 4 t
288 Carroll, Bklyn.
Kugel, A. / a
818 Hewitt PI. (Bronx)
Kugler, A. A. 1 b 441 E. 134
Kuhlman, H. W. ph
Hempstead, L. I.
Kuhn, S. O. 1 c 221 E. 123
Kunstler, M. B. 1 c 204 W. 136
Kumamoto, S. pi Hartley
Kupfer, V.B. 3 b
Q2 and Madison ave.
Kurtz, A. E. p E. Stroudsburg, Pa.
Kurtz, A. T. 3 t
§4 Morningside ave.
Kuschke, C. p Hartley
Kuser, P. D. nm s 441 E. 57
Kutscher, S. 3 m
100 Broad, Stapleton, S. I-
Kuzmier, G. P. 1 s 106 E. 56
Lacy, F. T. 1 s 411 W. 115
Laing, J. A. 3 / Hartley
Lambuth, D. K. ph 529 W. 123
Lamke, D. H. 4 s
35 Pineapple, Bklyn.
Lamont, F. C. ph Englewood, N. J.
Lancer, J. J. 3 m
1336 Washington ave.
Landon, S. L. 2 s 19 E. 53
Landsman, S. 4 j 445 W. 40
Lane, B. E. pi 435 W. 123
Lang, J. T. / a 53 Charlton
Langmann, O. F. / a 121 W. 57
Langstaff, B. M. 1 m
19 Seventh ave., Bklyn.
Langworthy, H. T. 1 m 346 W. 57
Langer, W. 2 c Livingston
Lapolla, G. M. 2 c 178 E. 114
Large, D. L. nm b Brooks
Laroque, F. 1 s Livingston
Larter, H. M. 4 t Whittier
Lasch, J. S. 1 s 77 E. 109
Lasher, D. McM 1 c
382 Warburton ave., Yonkers
Latham, W. E. 2 I 510 W. 124
Latham, E. B. nm s
135 and Riverside Drive
Latham, H. S. 3 c
17 Pleasant PL, Arlington, N. J.
Latham, M. L. p Whittier
Latourette, J. R. 1 / Hartley
Lattin, C. P. 1 c
Lowerre Summit, Yonkers
Lau, R. F. 4 c 650 Leonard, Bklyn.
Lauery, M. A. 1 /
174 Grand, Jersey City
Lauderburn, F. C. gr t
175 Mott ave.
Laurence, E. E. 2 b
535 Union ave., Bronx
Laurent, H. P. 2 s 151 W. 95
La Vake, R. T. 3 m 319 W. 103
Lavandera, M. 3 m 52 W. 65
Lawrence, L. M. ph 6oq W. 135
Lawson, G. P. 3 t 527 W. 124
Leach, A. A., Jr. 1 s
418 Dean, Bklyn.
Leaning, E. H. 4 s Livingston
4Q
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Leary, Jr., D, 3 c 225 W. 120
Leavenworth, E. W. 3 / Livingston
Leavenworth, K. E. 3 t Brooks
Leavitt, C. M. ph Whittier
Lebendig, A. 2 m
Leber, O. H. 4 m
928 Bloomfield, Hoboken
Lebowichj L. gr t i486 Fifth ave.
Lee, A. 3 t Whittier
Levy, Arthur M. nm c 614 VV. 113
Lee, E. C. nm b Whittier
Lee, E*. F. pi 494 Elton, Bklyn.
Lee. E. H. 3 / 26 W. 140
Lee, F. M. 3 t Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Lee, M. L. 2 s Hartley
Lee, M. T. p 378 Third, Bklyn.
Lee, 0.3 b 420 W. 121
Leerburger, B. 3 b 306 W. 99
Leggett, A. L. 3 t
49 Warren, Bklyn.
Leiby, E. V. 4 t Whittier
Leiser, Jr., F. 1 s
682 Harman, Bklyn.
Leland, A. P. ph
Morningside ave. W. and 118
Leland, F. ph 943 Lexington ave.
Lennon, M. A. 4 t Whittier
Lemowitz, N. H. pi 38 W. 113
Lent, J. R. 2 c 47 Claremont ave.
Leo, J. I b
91 Ashburton ave., Yonkers
Leonard, C. W. 3 t
11 Schuyler Court, Bayonne
Leonard, M. J. 1 s 14 W. 101
Leonard, W. M. nm c
2420 Seventh ave.
LeRoy, R. 3 / 28 Seventh ave.
Leslie, E. E. 1 s 619 W. 113
Leslie. E. H. 2 s 616 W. 114
Lesser, M. L. 2 c 308 W. 88
Lessey, B. ph 3157 Broadway
Lester, C. F. ph 115 W. 84
Lester, C. F. pi Elizabeth, N. J.
Leuchs, F. A. H. ph 370 E. 145
Leuchs, M. J. C. gr t 370 E. 145
Levene, H. 4 t 12 Attorney
Leveridge, E. S. I b 277 E. B'vjay
Levin, L. A. O. 1 m 22 E. 120
Levine, M. ph 155 Madison
Levine, O. 3 c 48 W. 114
Levinthal, I. H. 3 c 353 W. 123
Levison, L. H. 2 c 122 Riverside Dr.
Levonian, L. K. 4 t 346 W. 57
Levy, F. S., Jr. 1 /
no Central Park W.
Levy, B. nm I 202 E. 68
Levy, H. C. nm b 305 W. 70
Levy, I. J. 4 m Hartley
Levy, J. 3 b 202 E. 68
Levy, N. 1 s 36 W. 128
Levy, S. E. 3 b 431 W. 121
Lewinski, E. H. pi 60 Second ave.
Lewis, C. A. 2 b 417 W. 118
Lewis, F. R. 1 m 161 W. 105
Lewis, L. C. 4 c Livingston
Lewis, P. P. / a 164 W. 123
Libbey, W. E. 1 / Hartley
Lichtenberger, J. P. pi
2372 Seventh ave.
Lichtenstein, I. phar
1386 Prospect ave.
Lieberman, L. phar 322 E. 77
Liebman, L. M. 2 c
404 St. Nicholas ave.
Liebler, H. B. 1 c Riverside, Conn.
Liebovitz, S. 3 c 31 W. 89
Liebowitz, B. 1 s 31 W. 89
Lincoln, M. B. 3 t $03 W. 121
Lindemann, C, Jr. 1 s
610 River, Hoboken, N. J.
Lindquist, H. S. gr. t
45 Tinton ave., Bronx
Lineberger, J. S. 2 s Livingston
Linehan, P. H. p 607 W. 138
Lingg, A. S. 4 t
109 St. Paul's ave., Tompkinsville
Linn, P. H. 4 t Hartley
Linthlen, W. / a 709 Grand
Lipe, M. V. ph Brooks
Lipman, B. 1 f South Orange, N. J.
Lippmann, H. M. 3 c 60 E. 91
Lipstatej W. A. 2 s 529 W. ill
Lissauer, A W. 3 s
4777 Central Park W.
Litman, T. 1 s 1 15-17 E. 96
Littell, E. D. 3 t 44 W. 99
Littenberg, S. J. 4 m 222 W. 139
Livingston, W. S., Jr. 1 s 161 E. 36
Lloyd, K. E. 4 s 607 W. 113
Lloyd. L. 2 c 3136 Broadway
Lobdell, J. N. 4 / Hartley
Lobeck, A. E. 4 c Haworth, N. J.
Locke, A. M. 4 t 61 E. 60
Locke, C. M. ph
253 S. Ninth ave., Mt. Vernon
Locke, P. E. 3 s 346 W. 71
Lodge, N. gr t Whittier
Loder, G. E. 3 c
Post Road, Port Chester, N. Y.
Loening, G. C. 3 c 48 W. 59
Loeny, A. A. 2 s 610 W. 113
LoeJirsen, A. 2 b 2133 Third ave.
Logan, L. R. 4 t
54 Morningside ave.
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
41
Logan, U. 3 b Pennsylvania ave.,
Yonkers Park
Lombard, J. O. 3 s
Lommel, G. L. s
502 Manhattan ave.
Lone, W. A. 1 c
Long, A. I. 4 t 510 JV. 124
Long, D. 2 b
42 Lenox Road, Bklyn.
Long, E. O. p 156 E. 94
Long, W. B. 2 m
Hotel Carlton, W. 54
Loomie, L. S. 3 s
36 Morningside ave. E.
Lopez, C. nm c
716 St. Nicholas ave.
Lord, F. B., Jr. 2 / 36 W. 51
Lord, J. W. z s 163 E. 71
Lor in g, S. G. 3 t
24 Valley, Orange
Lothrop, A. P. p Hartley
Lourio, A. L. 2 c
249 Hewes, Bklyn.
Love, A. J. nm m 3440 Broadway
Lovejoy, J. M. 1 s
7 Fairview PL, New Rochelle
Lovell, G. G. I b 202 JV. 82
Loveman, M. H. 3 c 210 W. 139
Low, J. F. c
36 Quinn, Stapleton, N. Y.
Lowe, D. V. 1 s Englewood, N. J.
Lowenthal, E. pi Brooks
Lowes, M. F. 3 t 147 JV. 84
Lovjrey, M. S.3 t 153 Riverside Dr.
Lowther, E. A. pi 133 W. 4
Lubarsky, L. H. p 2 E. in
Lucas, D. R. p 104 W. 83
Lucas, E. D. ph 41 E. 69
Lucas, J. M. 3 I
827 President, Bklyn.
Luccock, H. E. ph 700 Park ave.
Lucey, M. H. gr t 35 W. 119
Ludwig, A. gr t 227 N. Henry
Luetscher, G. D. pi Livingston
Luhman, C. c New Rochelle
Liihrs, I. 3 c 153 North, Jersey City
Lukens, E. F. 2 s 216 E. 61
Lund, L. N. 3 s
Lawrence Park, Bronxville
Lupton, E. R. pi 338 W. 56
Lupton, J. R. 4 t 503 JV. 121
Luscomb, H. T. 4 s
439 Macon, Bklyn.
Luth, E. H. t 54 JV. 105
Lyman, C. S. p
Hastings-on-Hudson
Lyman, G. D. 3 m 231 W. 69
Lynch, G. A. 3 / 102 E. 101
Lynch, K. D. 1 m
615 Charles, West Hoboken
Lynne, M. pi 500 JV. 121
Lyon, D. O. ph
in Crary ave., Mt. Vernon
P/TcAlpin, K. R. 2 m 55 W. 33
McBee, M. V. pi 417 W. 118
McBride, A. A. pi 700 Park ave.
McBride, C. A. phar 310 Mortimer
ave., Rutherford, N. J.
McBurney, M. 2 rn 38 E. 31
McCall, R. gr t Whiuier
McCanliss, L. E. 1 / Livingston
McCann, E. O. 2 s 510 W. 124
McCann, M. D. 2 b
69 Ashford, Bklyn.
McCarthy, C. A. 4 m 145 W. 61
McCarthy, T. 2 I 137 W. 120
McCartney, E. B. 4 s 429 W. 117
McCarty, S. A. gr t
236 Tyler, Trenton
McChrystal, M. A. 2 s Livingston
McClelland, G. W. ph C. C. N. Y.
McClenahan, E. M. I b 121 E. 40
McCloskey, J. H. 3 t Hartley
McCluskey, R. J. 4 m 304 W. 55
McConnell, L. W. 1 s 522 W. 123
McConnell, B. E. 3 s 429 W. 117
McCormick, M. G. gr t Whiuier
McCormick, W. J. 1 / Livingston
McCoun, Jr., F. H. 3 c 39 W. 84
McCoy, Jr., P. J. c 414 W. 149
McCreery, J. A. 2 m
350 Lexington ave.
McCrorken, E. P. 2 s 135 W. 92
McCulloch, P. L. 3 s 429 W. 117
McCully, P.M. 3 t 541 JV. 123
McCully, M. S. 4 t 541 JV. 123
McCune, G. 3 t Whiuier
McDermott, H. V. 2 c
850 St. Marks ave., Bklyn.
McDonald, J. O. 3 m 346 W. 57
McDonald, M. F. gr t
229 Clinton Pi., Bklyn.
McGild, F. C. gr t 210 W. 123
McGill, N. W. 1 / Livingston
McGovern, R. A. 2 s 122 W. 77
McGowin, M. O. 3 t 501 JV. 123
McGrann, W. H. 1 / 107 W. 43
McGrath, E. M. 3 t Madison, N. J.
McGrath, J. I b
McGrath, W. J. gr t 621 W. 181
McGinness, F. V. 2 s
98 Decatur, Bklyn.
42
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Mclntyre, K. A. i s
146 So. 9th ave., Mt. Vernon
McKanna, E. A. 2 s Hartley
McKay, W. W. 2 m 94 Lawrence
McKee, E. D. ph 503 W. 122
McKeen, E. 4 t Whittier
McKeever, E. J. I b 17 Bank
McKenna, M. E. p 155 W. 91
McKennis, H. 3 / Livingston
McKenney, W. J. 2 c 329 W. 77
McKenzie, W. T. pi 700 Park ave.
McKeovan, M. J. 3 b
762 West End ave.
McKeown, S. A. s
762 West End ave.
McKinlay, C. M. 1 m
Tenafly, N. J.
McKinley, V. P. 3 t 423 W. 118
McKinney, M. E. ph
351 St. Nicholas ave.
McLane, F. M. pi 229 W. 126
McLaughlin, E. B. 3 t Whittier
McLaughlin, P. gr t
204.0 Seventh ave.
McLaury, F. 3 c 215 W. 115
McLean, C. 4 m 8 E. 9
McLean, M. 3 b Brooks
McLochlin, G. G. 2 s 323 W. 89
McLoughlin, W. G. pi
558 Jersey ave., Jersey City
McMakin, A. L. ph 527 W. 123
McMichael, J. pi 700 Park ave.
McMillan, M. E. 4 t 525 W. 123
McMillen, E. ph 18 W. 103
McMorrow, T. J. 3 / 63 E. 93
McNally, K. M. 4 t 250 W. 88
McPherson, H. 2 b 211 W. 85
McVaugh, R. 4 / 421 W. 121
McSweeney, J. M. phar 144 W. Ji8
Mabee, W. S. 4 c
794 E. 19, Paterson
Mabrey, H. R. 3 t Whittier
Mac'ColI, R. J. 2 c 502 W. 113
MacCutcheon, A. M. 4 s
544 W. 113
MacCutcheon, Paul J. 2 s
Pier 30, N. R.
Macdonald, E. B. 3 b
431 Riverside Drive
MacDonald, W. T. 4 s 413 W. 117
MacDowell, T. L. 4 / 415 W. 118
MacGibbon, A. K. gr t 430 W. 118
MacGreevy, W. J. 4 f 545 W. 123
MacGregor, C. P. pi 59 W. 69
MacGuire, C. J., Jr. 1 m 120 E. 60
Mack, L. M. gr t 571 W. 159
Mackby, J. C. / a 2 W. 117
MacKay, E. ph Whittier
Mackenzie, A. p Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.
Mackenzie, E. H. 1 c 604 W. 114
Mackintosh, J. H. 1 c Hartley
MacLachlan, C. F. ph. 418 W. Jl8
MacLean, D. C. p 31 W. 129
MacLear, M. 3 t 531 W. 124
MacLear, M. 3 t 527 W. 124
Macmillan, B. A. ph 519 W. 121
MacMurray, C. F. 2 b
Nyack, N. Y.
MacNary, E. E. 4 t
107 Morningside ave.
Macneil, A. R. 4 t Whittier
MacRossie, W. 1 c
1981 Madison ave.
Madison, H. T. pi Barrett Manor
Magarge, S. T., Jr. p 503 W. 140
Maguire, C. F. 1 c 118 W. 84
Mahnken, L. / a Livingston
Mahon, D. H. I b 229 W. 138
Mahon, R. V. 2 c 229 W. 138
Maison, E. N. 2 b Rutherford, N. J.
Malcomson, M. D. 2 s
Mailer, J. 2 s 417 6
Malmros, N. L. A. 2 s
in 1, Yonkers
Manchester, M. I. 3 t Whittier
Mandel, L. 2 b 135 Avenue C.
Mandeville, F. N. 3 m
256 Clinton ave., Newark
Manguse, W. P. p 541 W. 124
Manley, A. L. ph 303 W. 133
Man love, M. B. 4 t 528 W. 1 23
Mann, K. ph 251 W. 100
Manny, F. A. gr t 414 W. 118
Manvjell, T. P. 3 t Whittier
Mapelsden, R., Jr. 4 c 565 W. 113
Mapes, C. D. s
Mapes, M. C. 3 s 78 Fisher ave.,
White Plains, N. Y.
Marcus, B. 1 c 315 Riverside Drive
Marcus, C. 3 s Wave Crest, F. R.
Marcus, C. L. 3 c
315 Riverside Drive
Marder, J. D. 2 s 222 W. 122
Margolis, L. p 12 E. 113
Marilley, E. P. 2 c 504 W. 112
Marshy, M. E. ph Westfield, N. J.
Markwitz, A. f a
886 Park ave., Bklyn.
Marren, M. L. 4 t Brooks
Martini, A. S. 3 t 612 W. 184
Martin, D. M. 1 / 44 W. 40
Martin, E. 2 b 510 W. 124
Martin, E. M. 2 b
Perth Amboy, N. J.
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
43
Martin, H. P. i s
208 Union ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Martin, M. L. 4 t Jl'hiltier
Martland, R. 2 m
1 138 Broad, Newark
Marsden, W. E. 2 I Livingston
Marsh, A. G. 2 s 558 W. 113
Marsh, D. j t 5°3 W. 122
Marshall. A. M. 4 t
42 Main ave., Elmhurst, N. Y.
Marshall, J. F. gr t ion Tiffany
Marshall, R. P. 4 c
433 Central Park W.
Marshall, T. F. pi 7°° Park ave.
Marshall, YV. R. 4 s ion Tiffany
Marum, M. G. 1 s
576 E. 26, Paterson
Marwick, R. H. 2 s
2340 Seventh ave.
MascorJ, E. F. gr t Whittier
Mason, F. L. 3 s 342 E. 152
Massee, E. M. 3 t
47 Claremont ave.
Massell, A. S. gr t
1772 Madison ave.
Masterton, R. C. 1 / 418 W. 144
Masters, M. P. 3 t Whittier
Mast in. F. J. 4 b 4T5 W. 1 18
Mathews, A. W. 3 * '28 W. II
Mathews, M. E. 3 t 142 W. 139
Mathewson, C. A. p 519 W. 121
Matteson, C. S. t 125 Manhattan
Matthews, A. T. phar
Matz, L. 2 s Hartley
Maul, Wm. F. nm c Livingston
Maurer, H. B. / a
Hempstead, L. I.
Maurice, A. T. 2 / Livingston
Maves, A. E. 3 /
2078 Anthony ave.
Maxon, M. 4 b 239 So. Tenth ave.,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
May, C. E. p Livingston
May, E. R. 3 s
Mayer, L. 3 m 437 W. 59
Mayer, Mac D. f a
104 St. Marks ave. Bklyn.
Mayers, L. S. 1 c 310 W. 80
Ma'vnard, H. A. ph 700 Park ave.
Mead, C. B. / a 614 W. 113
Mead, F. S., Jr. 3 c 605 W. 113
Mehler, E. S. f a
619 West End ave.
Mehler, L. 3 c 619 West End ave,
Meier, G.E. 2 b I W. 92
Mela, H. F. 3 / 3" 7 E- 6l
Melamed, R. H. ph 531 W. 123
Melitzer, S. 3 c 246 Rivington
Mellen, H. L. 2 c 3609 Broadunv
Mellick, A. C. ph 316 IV. S/.
Melville, J. W. 3 c
162 Columbia Heights, Bklvti.
Melville, N. J. ph
E. 165 and Union ave.
Mendelowitz, M. H. 1 s 311 E. 42
Mendelsohn, A. 1 s 611 W. 114
Menefee, A. B. s 530 W. 112
Menke, \V. 4 J 155 W. 63
Menocal, J. G. 4 s Hartley
Merlis. I. 2; 3 Rutgers
Merrett, C. C. ph Brooks
Merriam, E.E. 4t 50 and Tenth ave.
Merrill, V. I. 4 t Whittier
Merritt, E. S. 3 t Whittier
Messenger, H. S. 3 b 534 W. 124
Messer, W. T. ph
Messing, M. K. I b
78 Broad, Stapleton, S. I.
Mctcalf, M. L. 4 t Whittier
Metzger, L. G. IV. ph Whittier
Meyer, A. H. 2 c 404 E. 141
Meyer, A. W. p 503 W. 121
Meyer, E. G. 1 s 10S W. 124
Meyer, F. A. 4 t
IS Cedar PL, Yonkers
Meyer, H. H. gr t 150 Fifth ave.
Meyer, M. E. f a 501 W. 121
Meyer, M. M. 4 t 41S W. nS
Meyer, S. M. 3 t Whittier
Meyer, V. E. f a Coytesville, N. I.
Michailovsky, B. 4 m 146 W. 121
Michtom, J. S. 1 c
404 Tompkins ave., Bklyn.
Middleton, F. 4 t
366 St. Nicholas ave.
Milbank, H. 3 / 154 W. 4S
Milholland, W. H. 1 / 280 W. 115
Miltman, W. B. 3 c
244 Garfield PI., Bklvn.
Miller, A. B. ph 420 W. 118
Miller, C. B. 3 c
246 Central Park W.
Miller, D. G. 3 s 605 W. 112
Miller, D. H. T. 2 / Livingston
Miller, E. H. 3 b 73 E. 92
Miller, F. 1 j Westchester, N. Y.
Miller, H. R. 4 c
446 Willoughby ave., Bklyn.
Miller, M. A. 4 b JI4 W. 104
Miller, M. C. 3 t 117 W. 115
Miller, M. E. 4 t 525 W. 123
Miller, M. R. 3 t
526 Flatbush ave., Bklyn.
Miller, O. L. pi 700 Park ave.
44
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Miller, R. C. nm c
218 N. James, Peekskill
Miller, W. A. gr t Matawan, N. J.
Miller, W. M. 3 t Whittier
Miller, W. R. 1 j 254 W. 85
Millett, K. B 1 / 250 W. 88
Milliken, L. G. 4 t 425 W. 114
Millis, J. F. gr t S57 W. 124
Mills, L. S. 4 / 423 W. 118
Miltenberger, A. L. 3 s Hartley
Miltenberger, W. 3 s Hartley
Minahan, M. E. 3 t Whittier
Miner, R. phar 29 Charles
Minkin, J. S. ph 2 E. 115
Minor, S. B. I b Brooks
Mishkin, V. 4 i 79 Clinton
Mitchell, I. T. nm t Whittier
Mitchell, J. C. ph
707 Washington, Hoboken
Mitchell, M. 4 t Whittier
Mitchell, M. J. 3 t 415 W. J 18
Mitchell, W. W. 2 m , 314 W. 56
Mittag, F. O., Jr. p 500 W. 121
Mixsell, H. R. 2 m 350 W. 71
Miyata, B, n 571 W. 159
Mockridge, R. W. 4 c
70 and Col. ave.
Modell, D. A. 4 t 2 E. in
Moeller, S. A. 4 t 341 W. 57
Moitrier, W., Jr. 2 c Hartley
Molter, H. 2 c
51 Jefferson ave., Maspeth
Monks, W. D. p 353 S. Third ave.,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Monroe, O. L. 4 m 118 W. 64
Monsky, J. 3 / 318 E. 9
Monteser, M. J. 2 b 60s Van Cort-
landt Park ave., Yonkers
Montgomery, A. P. 4 c
Flushing, L. I.
Montgomery, B. W. pi Whittier
Montgomery, W. B., Jr. 2 s
Livingston
Moon, W. C. gr t
Piermont-on-Hudson
Moon, E. A. p 59 Perry
Moore, F. W. 3 s Livingston
Moore, F. W., Jr. 2 m
408a Clinton, Bklyn.
Moore, G. D. 4 t
1253 Garden, Hoboken
Moore, H. N. 3 t 627 W. 115
Moore, J. H. ph 8 W. 119
Morales, L. / a 350 W. 58
Moray, B. T. / 135 Broadway
Mordecai, E. C. I b 319 W. 105
Morehouse, E. 4 b 247 W. 107
Moremen, M. L. 1 / 420 W. 118
Morewood, F. E. / a 86 Front
Morgan, T. C. 3 c
1 173 Bushwick ave., Bklyn.
Morgan, W. R. 3 c 520 W. 123
Morgenstern, A. F. I b 45 W. 88
Morgenstern, G. A. / a 520 W. 123
Moriarty, M. L. 3 t
66 Post, Yonkers
Morrey, W. T. pi 535 W. m
Morrill, Otis C. 2 s 205 W. 109
Morris, A. B. 2 c
169 Warren, Bklyn.
Morris, D. A. nm s 143 W. 129
Morris, D. H. pi 269 W. 72
Morris, D. H. 3 m 611 W. 113
Morris, F. K. p 2027 Seventh
Morris, M. J. p 2027 Seventh
Morris, N. H. 3 t 501 W. 120
Morris, A. D. 1 s 612 W. 116
Morrissey, A. I. 3 t 171 E. 69
Morrotv, E. A. 4 t Whittier
Morrow, R. L. 2 s 66 W. 40
Morse, L. B. p 524 W. 123
Mortimer, A. S. 1 / 67 W. 71
Moses, E. F. 2 c 222 E. 61
Moses, R. 2 b 103 W. 88
Mosher, J. A. ph Livingston
Moss, A. B. 3 c 306 E. 120
Mott, F. D. 1 s
309 Nelson ave., Peekskill, N. Y.
Mott, K. 3 s
309 Nelson ave., Peekskill, N. Y.
Mott, W. W. 3 m 166 W. 121
Mount, G. i ra Hartley
Mucklow, W. B. 2 s 614 W. 113
Mulholland, V. I. 2 s
2580 Marion ave.
Mullen, J. H. 2 c 6 E. 127
Mullen, L. B. p
2500 Newkirk ave., Bklyn.
Mullen, R. F. p 420 E. 84
Muller, A. H. 4 b 166 W. 122
Muller, F. 2 s 1198 Franklin ave.
Muller, H. J. 1 c 166 W. 122
Mulligan, A. / 46 W. 49
Munson, D. G. ph
1052 Lincoln PI., Bklyn.
Murai, Y. pi 700 Park ave.
Murch, H.D.3b Glen Ridge, N. J.
Murchie, M. I. 3 t
1249 Amsterdam ave.
Murdoch, A. M. 4 t 419 W. 121
Muriel, J. 3 j Hotel Victoria
Murphy, C. A. 2 / Livingston
Murphy, E. J. 3 t Whittier
Murphy, H. C, Jr. / a Hartley
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
45
Murphy, //. F. 3 t 147 W. 84
Murphy, R. K. 2 s Livingston
Murphy, \\T. D. 4 c 40 E. 49
Murray, A. 4 t 509 W. 122
Murray, E. S. c 164 W. 96
Murray, H. F. 2 c 514 W. 122
Murray, J. A., Jr. 2 c 419 W. 147
Murray, J. E. ph 527 If '. 124
Murray, J. N. 1 j 419 W. 147
Murray, L. H. 3 t 24$~W. 129
Murray. L. S. / a
77 Mountain a<ve., Montclair
Murray, T. R. 4 c 339 E. 87
Murray, V. B. 1 m
in Fordham Road, E. Fordham
Murray, W. S. pi ph 419 W. 121
Murtha, M. W. 4 b
549 Riverside Drive
Murtland, C. 3 t 312 W. 121
Nail, E. ph 131 W. 58
Nammack, C. H. 3 c 42 E. 29
Nammack, E. F. ph
Nam mack, M. 2 b 42 E. 29
Nash, L. 3 t Whittier
Nash, R. F. 4 c 526 W. 114
Nasmith, A. I. ph 700 Park ave.
Nassau, M. B. F. 3 t Whittier
Nathan, C. J. 1 s 12 W. 74
Nathan, S. 3 s
1390 Boston Road, Bronx
Nathans, A. J. 4 t
Hotel Colonial, 81 W.
Naughton, H. J. 1 m
Nauheim, M. 2 c
96 Neilson ave., Far Rockaway
Navarro, J. R. s 557 W. 124
Nave, M. D. 3 / 329 W. 124
Naylor, H. R. 1 s 9 Murray
Neergaard, A. E. 2 m 151 W. 70
Negus, J. C. 4 c Hartley
Neilson, J. p Hotel Majestic, 72 W.
N el ken, A. 3 t Whittier
Nelrns, W. S. p Hartley
Nelson, A. P. ph 175 Ninth ave.
Nelson, C. G. pi 3924 Broadway
Nelson, N. E. 4 t
■ 924 Prospect ave., Bronx
Nessler, E. C. 4 t 300 W. 109
Neuman, A. 2 c 294 Broome
Neumann, H. ph
Haven ave., cor. W. 169
New, F. D. ph
Madison ave. and 51
Neivbold, H. 3 b 508 W. 113
Newell, R. 4 t f,zz W. 123
Newhouse, E. L., Jr. 1 c 71 B'way
Newman, C. A. P. gr t
958 Prospect ave.
Nevaland, M C. 4 b 550 IV. 113
Newton, E. 1 s 60 St. Nicholas ave.
Newton, N. L. ph Whittier
Nichols, D. M. 4 t Whither
Nicholson, A. M. gr t 540 W. J 22
Nicholson, J. H. 4 t Whittier
Nielsen, K. 4 t $00 W. 121
Nieto, L. E. c
Battery Park Building
Nifenecker, E. A. pi 585 W. 178
Nighman, C. E. 3 c 616 W. 114
Nilsen, A. 4 m 27 W. 88
Nishimoto, I. pi 121 W. 64
Mswauger, L. 4 t Whittier
Nitchie, E. 2 b
137 Prospect Park W., Bklyn.
Nixon, L. E. ph 245 W. 14
Noble, R. 2 c 304 W. 77
Noble, W. C. pi Madison, N. J.
Nolan, A. A. nm t
Q79 Intervale ave., Bronx
Norden, N. L. 3 c 101 W. 118
Norris, E. L. pi
134 W- 32, Bayonne
Norris, G. 1 I 565 W. 113
Norris, J. S. ph 541 W. 123
Norsworthy, L. D. 2 s 557 W. 124
Nottingham, J. R. 2 b Brooks
Novomesky, E. 1 s
141 2 Crotona ave., Bronx
Noyes, A. G. pi 618 W. 114
Noyes, J. W. 1 c 7 Park ave.
Nye, B. H. 3 c
118 Locust Hill ave., Yonkers
Nyitray, E. 3 b 983 Lexington ave..
Oakley, T. P. 3 c
1 Mt. Morris Park W.
Oakley, W. W. 2 s 420 W. 144
Oberndorfer, M. I b
1037 Lexington ave.
Obler, D. M. 2 s 192 Rivington
O'Brian, L. E. 2 s
O'Brien, J. 2 c Hartley
O'Brien, J. G. 3 b
247 Marcy ave., Bklyn.
O'Brien, M. B. 3 t 128 W. 95
Ockers, L. E. I b Brooks
Ockert, F. W. 1 s 254 W. 104
O'Connor, F. F. 2 s Hartley
O'Connor, V. A. / 698 Decatur
O'Conor, J. A. 1 m 30 W. 60
O'Conor, N. J. 1 I 24 E. 33
O'Donnell, P. J. ph 135 E. 96
Odell, B. B. nm c 627 W. 115
46
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Odencrantz, L. C. pi 260 W. 1 22
O'Donnell, A.T. 2 b
2681 Briggs ave., Bronx
O'Donnell, H. nm c Hartley
O'Donnell, M. M. A. 2 b
2681 Briggs ave., Bronx
Oesterlein, C. R. ph 19 W. 129
Offner, R. 1 t 114 E. 54
Ogden, A. 3 f 612 W. 116
Ogden, C. J. ph 250 W. 88
O'Gorman, A.M. I b 318 W. 108
O' Gorman, E. 3 b 318 W. 108
O'Gorman, J. M. 3 t Hartley
O'Kane, G. E. 4 /
460 Kosciusko, Bklyn.
O'Keeffe, L. L. 3 t
320 Halscy, Bklyn.
O'Neale, M. L. 2 s 417 W. 114
Oldham, M. 3 t Whither
Olinger, H. C. 4 s
625 Lexington ave.
Oliphant, J. ph 72 Madison ave.
Oliver, J. W. gr t Hartley
Olsan, H. 3 m 1840 Madison ave.
O'Mahoney, J. C. 4 c 544 W. 113
Openhym, W. A. 3 /
352 Riverside Drive
Oppenheim, E. 3 b 13 IV. 88
Oppermann, G. A. 4 t Whittier
O'Reilly, G. 3 t
428 No. Broad Elizabeth
Orvis, E. M. ph Brooks
Osborne, E. W. 2 c
73 St and B'way
Osborne, J. J. ph Hartley
Osborn, S. R. 2 s New Dorp, S. I.
Osheimer, C. pi 17 Concord
Osterhout, E. H. 2 c
Osterhout, W. B., Jr. 4 c
500 W. 122
Otis, A. H. c 157 W. 119
Otis, E. K. 4 t Hartley
Outterson, B. E. 3 t IVIiittier
Overman, B. 3 s
391 West End ave.
Owen, W. R., Jr. 2 s Livingston
Ozvens, J. L. 3 t 54.0 W. 159
Paddock, B. H. ph Madison, N. J.
Paddock, L. 2 c 141 W. 70
Paddock, R. 2 c 141 W. 70
Paffard, H. T. 1 m
238 Clinton, Bklyn.
Paine, A. M. 4 t 505 W. 122
Paine, W. E. Jr. c 328 W. 108
Palliser, G. A. / a
1397 Ocean ave., Bklyn
Palliser, M. B. 2 b Brooks
Palmer, E. A. 2 b 657 IV. 183
Palmer, F. W. 3 t
513 7, College PI., L. I.
Palmer, H. 4 c 344 W. 84
Palmer, J. H. ph Wakefield
Palmer, L. A. gr t 235 E. 18
Palmer, W. F. 1 s 537 W. 121
Palmer, W. M. 3 / Hartley
Panaroni, A. G. ph 460 W. 131
Parmelee, M. 3 t Whittier
Pardee, H. E. 3 m 74 W. 48
Parker, A. R. 1 s 160 W. 141
Park, J. L., Jr. 1 / 627 W. 115
Parmenter, E B. 4 t Whittier
Passman, M. O. / a 141 W. 113
Pascale, V. 2 m 49 Grove
Paterson, A. H. 1 j 118 E. 53
Patterson, F. A. ph Livingston
Patterson, F. M. pi 700 Park ave.
Patterson, R. C, Jr. 1 s Livingston
Patterson, S. G. ph 503 W. 121
Patterson, S. W. gr t 343 W. 23
Paton, F. W. 3 m 356 W. 57
Patten, P. 3 b 76 Etna, Bklyn.
Patton, J. ph Brooks
Paul, E. M. 4 t 422 W. IIS
Paul, H. G. ph 511 W. 122
Paul, W. A. 3 c
301 Academy, Jersey City
Paulsen, G. W. 1 c
542 Mt. Hope PI.
Payne, F. p 520 W. 123
Peabody, J. D. 2 / 224 Madison ave.
Pearce, C. M. 2 s 429 W. 117
Pearl, J. ph C. C. N. Y.
Pearson, W. D. 2 c 158 W. 106
Pearson, P. C. pi 175 Ninth ave.
Peck, J. A., Jr. 2 s Pelham Manor
Peiser, D. W. 1 / Hartley
Pell, H. C. Jr. nm c
116 and Broadway
Pell, W. H. 3 c 404 W. 115
Pendleton, C. 3 t Whittier
Pennell, M. L. I b Brooks
Pcrcival, H. S. ph 175 Ninth ave.
Perez, P. E. phar 300 W. 112
Perham, B. E. 4 t 524 JV. 123
Perkins, E. M. ph 25 W. 93
Perkins, M. A. p 32 W. 38
Perkins, E. C. 2 m 346 W. 57
Perling, J. 4 c 440 Manhattan ave.
P ernes sin, N. 4 t 600 W. II 4
Perrier, J. L. ph 65 E. 83
Perrine, H. 4 c 820 West End ave.
Perry, A. C. F. 3 s
New Brighton, S. I.
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
47
Perry, E. M. ph 404 Third, Bklyn.
Perry, K. M. 4 s 531 \V. 113
Perry, \V. F. pi
954 Boulevard, Astoria
Pershing, C. L. 4 t 118 W. 64
Peshkin, H. C. 4 s 47 Delancey
Persons, W. Frank pi 105 E. 22
Peter, G. L. 1 s
410 Central Park W.
Peter, \V. F. 3 / Livingston
Peters, J. L. 1 c
410 Central Park W.
Peters, W. F., Jr. 1 s
410 Central Park W.
Petersen, L. S. 1 m 112 E. 85
Peterson, M. L. 4 b
935 College ave.
Peterson, W. H. p 226 E. 16
Pettit, W. S. ph 700 Park ave.
Pettit, A. F. T. ph Brooks
Peyser, E. R. 4 t 330 W. S5
Peyser, H. F. 3 c 101 W. 80
Peyton, G. S., Jr. 2 s 605 W. 113
Pfeiffer, E. H. 2 c 2 W. 94
Phelan, R. E. 2 s
Phelps, W. W. 3 t Whittier
Phelippoff, B. D. 1 s 5 W. 125
Phillips, C. D. 3 t 508 W. 122
Phillips, E. 3 b 35 Riverside Dr.
Phillips, E. H. 1 c 54 W. 95
Phillips, E. S. J., Jr. / a 335 W. 71
Phillips, H. S. 3 b 35 Riverside Dr.
Philson, J. De L. 1 s
16 Alice Court, Bklyn.
Phipps, C. F. gr t Montclair, N. J.
Phipps, H. M. 1 m 346 W. 57
Phipps, C. E. 4 t 417 W. 114
Picard, M. if 45 Park Place
Piel, H. G. s 245 W. 72
Pierce, M. B. 2 / Livingston
Pierce, M. B. / Livingston
Pierson, E. M. gr t Whittier
Pierson, H. O. 1 / 608 W. 113
Pignol, G. A. M. ph
594 E. 4, Bklyn.
Pinckney, M. L. 4 t 200 W. 88
Pino, E. V. 1 s 102 E. 15
Pitner, I. K. 4 t 418 W. 118
Pitt, S. 1 c
254 Cedar Rd., New Rochelle
Planer, C. H. 3 t
333 Hudson, Hoboken
Plaskett, G. M. ph 175 Ninth ave.
Piatt, R. F. 2 b 259 W. 109
Plalto, C. C. 3 t Whittier
Plant, E. 2 b 302 Central Park W.
Plummer, M. I b 253 W. 143
Points, T. S.
84 Storm ave., Jersey City
Poland, E. E. 3 t
12 Cambridge PL, Bklyn.
Pol hern us, M. B. I b
980 Boulevard, Astoria, N. Y.
Poll, D. 2 m 603 3, Bklyn.
Pollard, G. 11 in t 76 W. 105
Pollock, W. D. 4 t Richmond Hill
Pomeroy, A. L. ph
J 40 Highland ave., Orange
Pond, L. M. / a Livingston
Poole, K. E. p Brook's Hall
Popper, J. 3 m 739 E. 152
Porter, A. K. / a
320 Central Park W.
Porter, C. H., Jr. 4 m
Porter, E. E. 2 m 149 W. 73
Porter, G. H. pi Livingston
Porter, H. M. I b
175 Beech, Yonkers
Porter, W. R. 3 / 149 W. 73
Pdrterfield, A. W. ph Hartley
Potter, G. R. 3 t Whittier
Powell, A. L. 2 s
Rockville Centre, N. Y.
Powell, F. J. 3 / 331 E. 17
Powell, H. W. p 73 B'way
Powell, L. M. gr t 503 W. 121
Powell, T. R. pi Hartley
Powers, D. T. gr t 256 W. 121
Powers, L. W. i s 772 Park ave.
Prahl, J. A. 4 t 455 W. 143
Pratt, E. E. pi 528 W. 123
Pratt, E. L. 1 m
Pribble, E. E. 3 t 501 W. 121
Price, W. R. ph 65 B'way
Price, H. 3 c Livingston
Pride, O. L. ph 700 Park ave.
Pritz, B. / a 503 W. 121
Prochazka, O. I b 138 W. 13
Procknovo, C.S. 3 t
Port Chester, N. Y.
Propp, YV. A. ic 228 W. 140
Prout, W. S. 1 s Scarsdale, N. Y.
Prince, J. F. 4 c 429 W. 117
Pryor, K. B. phar Hartley
Pullis, L. A. nm c Bay Shore, N. Y.
Puorro, M. 3 t
82 Underhill ave., Bklyn.
Purves, E. K. pi 146 E. 36
Putnam, M. P. gr t Whittier
Putton, L. E. ph 88 Madison ave.
Qaackenbos, G. P. ph 331 W. 28
Quinby, E. M. 4 b
~I3 Davis ave., White Plains, N. Y.
48
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Quinby, M. G. 3 b Brooks Hall
Quinn, M. K. 4 b Brooks Hall
Rabinowitz, B. M. p 310 E. 19
Rabinowitz, E. N. ph 531 W. 123
Rade, H. S. 1 c
417 Miller ave., Bklyn. '
Radin, M. ph 844 Teasdale PI. I
Radin, P. ph 844 Teasdale Pi. j
Raffety, H. 1 / Hartley i
Ragsdale, O. M. nm I Livingston
Rahenort, W. L. gr t 315 W. 97
Rainey, M. C. 4 t Whitiier
Rainsford, L. F. 3 m 53 E. 20
Rambo, S. M. gr t Whittier
Ramsay, M. 4 t 458 W. 20
Ramsdell, E. G. 4 m
342 Convent ave.
Ramsdell, C. H. 2 c
342 Convent ave.
Rand, A. E. ph Livingston
Randolph, F. C. F. * 425 W. 114
Randolph, F. M. F. I b 425 W. 114
Ranger, E. A. 4 t 38 E. 73
Ransom, R. S., Jr. 1 J 338 W. 77
Ranson, A. A. 3 m 314 W. 56
Raphael, A. L. 2 s 329 E. 124
Rapoport, D. 4 / 21 W. 111
Rapp, P. L. 2 c 492 Third ave.
Rathjen, A. 1 / Hartley
Raucher, J. B. Z. ph 233 E. 22
Raiocliffe, E. 2 b
South Chestnut Drive, Bronx
Ray, J. R. ph Livingston
Read, F. W. 2 b 201 W. 112
Read, H. 2 / Livingston
Reber, John ph Livingston
Reblet, E. B. c 343 E. 68
Redding, H. E. pi 1320 52
Redmond, D. W. pi 505 W. 141
Redmond, K. C. 4 t 519 W. 123
Reed, A. Z. pi
Reed, D. B. 4 m 346 W. 57
Reed, H. B. 2 m Sea Bright, N. J.
Reed, L. A. 2 c 46 W. 83
Reed, L. R. 4 c 147 E. 61
Reeder, G. A. 2 b
Hastings-on-Hudson
Reesor, M. 4 t 418 W. 1 18
Regan, M. F. 3 t Hartley
Reid, C. nm c
876 West End ave., N. Y. C.
Reid, M. J. I b
58 Morningside ave.
Reid, M. J. 3 t 519 W. 121
Rehmann, E. 4 b 504 W. 112
Reide, J. F. 1 c 884 West End ave.
Reidv, M. J. 2 m 123 W. 61
Reilly, D. C. 2 b
22 Post ave., Port Richmond
Reilly, F. A. 1 /
137 So. Third ave., Mt. Vernon
Reilly. J. J. ph Hartley
Reiley, K. G. ph B'vuay and 1 03
Reichling, G. A. 3 c
127 Putnam ave., Bklyn.
Reindollar, t Whittier
Reiner, J. L. 1 / 521 W. 123
Reitlinger, B. H. ph 120 IV. 70
Reinhold, C. K. 4 t 163 W. 121
Reizenstein, C. L. 4 s
1340 Madison ave.
Rejall, A. E. gr t Hartley
Remington, H. W., Jr. 3 s
354 Convent ave.
Remsen, W. 2 c 612 W. 116
Renshaw, A. 1 c 612 W. 116
Renshaw, P. 1 s 612 W. 116
Renton, M. 2 b
207 Schermerhorn, Bklyn.
Renton, S. H. 2 c
207 Schermerhorn
Renwick, H. B. 2 c
116 and Riverside Drive
Reppenhagen, L. t 500 W. 121
Requa, A. 4 b 536 IV. 142
Restrepo, L. s 365 Edgecombe ave.
Rethy, J. B. 1 c 213 W. 121
Reynar, M. W. I b Brooks
Reynolds, V. t 4*9 W. 121
Reynolds, W. A. nm I
176 Amity, Flushing, L. I.
Riblet, G. E. 4 t 343 E. 68
Rice, E. G. t
247 Clare mont ave., Bklyn.
Rice, M. W. 3 s
107 Morningside ave.
Rice, M. 3 c 973 Second ave.
Rich, L. E. 4 t Whittier
Rich, N. E. 3 b 23 E. Second,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Richards, E.M. 3 t
1249 Amsterdam ave.
Richardson, A. A. 3 b
839 Jennings
Richardson, C. H. 3 m Livingston
Richardson, E. C. 4 t
475 Waverly ave., Bklyn.
Richardson, I. gr t 511 W. 122
Richmond, L. 3 t
98 James, Engleavood, N. J.
Richter, S. L. / 68 E. 79
Riddle, S. C. 2 / Livingston
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
49
Ridge, F. I. 2 m 3 5 W. 65
Ridlon, II. gr t 4*4 W. Ill
Riegel, G. H. 1 c 37 W. 81
Riegel, H. 4 c 648 E. 11
Riester, L. F. 4 t
210 Alexander ave.
Rilke, 0. E. 3 b 68 1 E. 170
Riley, 1. W. ph Livingston
Riley, W. L. 1 s 125 W. 92
Rimpo, E. W. 2 c Irvington, N. J.
Rinck, W. 2 c
127 Quitman, Newark
Rindge, F. H., Jr. 4 c
7S Manhattan ave.
Rinehart, G. L. 4 t Whittier
Ring, H. M. 4 t Whittier
Rinke, A. W. 2 / 174 W. 79
RiorJon, A. 3 b no E. 82
Rippere, R. H. gr t
492 Putnam ave., Bklyn.
Ripperger, W. L. 1 J 5° W. 130
Riblet, G. E. 4 t 343 E. 68
Ristine, F. H. ph Hartley
Roantree, W. F. gr t
15 Wadsworth ave.
Robbins, F. S. 4 t 417 W. 120
Robbins, L. W. 4 t 94 Lawrence
Robbins, S. 3 t Whittier
Robert, Ch. S. 2 s
1 121 Martine ave., Plainfield
Roberts, C. M. pi 619 W. 113
Robert, D. R. 1 m
97 Columbia Heights, Bklyn.
Roberts, E. D. gr t Livingston
Roberts, F. W. p
Central ave., Ft. Lee
Roberts, J. S. gr t 21 Beekman PI.
Roberts, P. L. 3 s
38 So. Parsons ave.
Roberts, W. H. 4 m 304 W. 55
Robertson, H. S. ph 3*7 W. 23
Robertson, M. L. p 319 W. 57
Robie, M. 4 c
Amsterdam ave., cor. 103
Robinson, C. 4 t 521 W. 122
Robinson, E. M. gr t 439 W- '23
Robinson, E. D. 3 b
2214 Andrews ave.
Robinson, J. S. 1 / Livingston
Robinson, K. D. 2 s 498 W. 136
Robinson, L. B. 1 m
Robinson, L. H. 2 c Hartley
Robinson, T. A. 2 J Hartley
Robinson, W. 3. p
2776 Decatur ave., Bedford Park
Robison, C. H. gr t Hartley
Roche, E. S. 1 c Livingston
Rockey, Paul 4 m 231 W. 69
Rockwood, J. P. 3 s Hartley
Rockwood, N. O. 2 c Hartley
Roddewig, G. W. 3 * 69 W. 93
Rodenburg, J. T. 2 s 444 W. 44
Rodes, F. L. 4 t 25 W. 93
Rodman, II. pi 430 W. 124
Roe, 0. L. 3 b 310 W. 98
Roeder, R. L. 2 c 202 VV. 103
Roelkey, D. E. p
Roessler, E. W. ph Livingston
Rogers, C. T. c 254 W. 133
Rogers, G. S. 3c 5^ W. \\z
Rogers, J. O. 3 t Whittier
Rogers, L. 4 t
194 Clinton, Bklyn.
Rogers, R. E. 3 / 228 Madison ave.
Rogoff, H. ph Thatford ave., Bklyn.
Roig, H. J. 2 I Livingston
Romagna, A. J. 4 c
2421 Prospect ave.
Rome, J. P. 3 c 458 Manhattan ave.
Rome, S. 3 b
334 Schermerhorn, Bklyn.
Roome, A. H. 4 t 49 W. 9
Roome, C. T. 4 m 346 W. 57
Rose, F. E. 2 b Hackensack, N. 3.
Rosebush, F. H. ph 611 W. 135
Rosenbaum, C. 2 m
693 Columbus ave.
Rosenbaum, E. J. pi
Rosenblatt, B. A. 2 /
1666 Bathgate ave.
Rosenblatt, F. F. pi 195 Clinton
Rosenbloom, J. 3 m Livingston
Rosenfelder, F. 3 b Brooks
Rosensohn, M. 3 m 246 Henry
Rosenthal. D. C. ph 515 W. 134
Rosenthal, G. J. 2 c 7 W. 120
Rosenthal, L. B. 3 m
mi Madison ave.
Rosinger, S. ph 531 W. 23
Ross, C. T. 2 m 365 W. 55
Ross, G. H. 2 s 60s W- "3
Ross, W. N. 1 c 449 W. 123
Rothberg, J. B. 4 s
1045 Bedford ave., Bklyn.
Rothenberg, A. 4 b Brooks
Rothschild, D. 1 s 586 E. 165
Rothschild, L. O. 3 c 251 W. 138
Rothschild, M. 3 s 825 E. 163
Rothschild, M. A. 4 c Hartley
Rothwell, A.S.U 144 W. 76
Rothwell, V. H. 1 s 144 W. 76
Rott, M. / a 4 E. 60
Rounds, W. S. pi
2206 Beverly Road, Bklyn.
50
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Roura, K. F. 3 nm t
244 Jefferson ave, Bklyn.
Rouse, E. C. 4 c 429 W. 117
Roux, W. C. 3 c 33 First ave.
Row ell, G. F. gr t 540 W . 122
Rowley, C. D. 1 c 148 W. 83
Roy, E. C. 3 / Livingston
Roy. M. M. 3 c 500 W. 122
Rubenovitz, H. H. ph 529 W. 123
Rue, M. A. 3 t Whittier
Rudensey, A. 1 c
92 Walnut, Montclair
Rufle, F. C. 1 c 103 W. 101
Runge, O. E. 1 c
783 Bushwick ave., Bklyn.
Runtz-Rees, C. ph Greenwich, Conn.
Runyon, C. 3 / Yonkers
Runyon, H. De M. I b
West Summitt, N. J.
Rupp, F. L. 2 s 604 W. 114
Rushmore, E. M.
129 Montague, Brooklyn
Rusk, E. gr t 636 Columbus ave.
Russell, G. E. 4 t 500 IV. 121
Russell, M. C. 3 t 94 Lawrence
Russell, W. L. gr t 59 W. 76
Rutledge, W. C. 4 m 346 W. 57
Ryan, H. W. 1 c Ossining, N. Y.
Ryan, J. J. 2 s 466 Lenox ave.
Ryan, W. C. ph 151 E. 127
Ryba, J. / 336 E. 71
Rydene, A. P. 4 t 427 IV. 154
Rypinski, J. E. 2 s 142 W. 105
Sabourin, M. L. 4 t
52 Stuart ave., Arlington, N. J.
St. John, F. B. 3 m 231 W. 69
Sachsse, K. ph 18 Morningside ave.
Sackett, H. A. 4 t
125 Brookfield ave., Nutley, N. J.
Sackett, N. p Hartley
Safier, I. E. / a
Sage, E. 3 t 2337 Broadway
Sage, G. N. 2 / 520 W. 123
Sait, E. McC. pi Hartley
Salmowitz, R. L. I b
23 Broome, Bklyn.
Salsbury, N. 3 c 30 W. 96
Salzano, F. 3 c 49 Watts
Samek, B. 3 b 567 IV. 113
Sammet, F. 4 b 158 W. 120
Samuels, A. B. ph 135 W. 142
Samuely, N. 1 s 535 Fifth
San, L. J. 3 c
104 Franklin ave., Passaic
Sanborn, M. L. I b
1477 Lexington ave.
Sanders, B. 3 c 62 W. 83
Sandford, G. I b Piermont, N. Y.
Sanford, C. H. 2 m 822 Eagle ave.
Santelices, D. 3 s Chilian Consulate,
43 Exchange Pi.
Sapinsky, B. 3 b Brooks
Sargent, A. H. ph 700 Park ave.
Sasnett, M. R. 3 t 418 IV. 168
Saul, G. E. I b
429 Ninth ave., L. I. City, N. Y.
Saunders, C. ph
Vassar Coll., Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Saunders, F. H. 2 s Hartley
Savitz, H. E. 2 b
43 Ross PL, IV est field, N. J.
Savitz, L. B. 4 b
43 Ross PL, IV est field, N. J.
Saxe, B. D. ph 659 E. 165
Saxe, J. G. 2 s 126 E. 19
Sarton, M. D. ph Edgewater, N. J.
Sayer, L. E. pi 505 W. 122
Scales, E. R. 3 b
62 Garrison ave., J. C.
Schaeffer, S. 4 m 109 E. 88
Schaffer, F. P. 2 / Livingston
Schaie, M. 3 m 125 W. 115
Schapiro, M. S. 2 s 326 E. Houston
Schaul, J. S. 3 c 35 W. 126
Scheib, R. 2 c 3430 Park ave.
Schellitzer, M. ph 128 E. 60
Schermerhorn, A. C. 3 c 25 E. 79
Scheuer, H. G. 3 b Brooks
Schiffer, J. W. 3 c 22 W. 76
Schlachting, L., Jr., 1 s
1822 Brooklyn ave., Bklyn.
Schlauch, W. S. p
2083 Daly ave., Bronx
Schlesinger, G. 1 c
75 W. Tremont ave.
Schlesinger, M. D. 3 b
9 Tower PL, Yonkers, N. Y.
Schlesinger, M. L. ph 9 Tower Pi.
Schlichten, G. Wm., Jr. 1 c
116 Amsterdam av.
Schlossman, W. M. 2 c 11a W. 118
Schlottman, G. 1 s
2383 Davidson ave., Bronx
Schmelzel, C. 2 c 18 W. 56
Schmidt, A. M. 1 c
556 McDonough, Bklyn.
Schmidt, E. G. fa
353 Halsey, Bklyn.
Schmidt, J. W. / a 301 E. 155
Schmidt, M. L. 3 t 419 IV. 121
Schneeberg, D. pi 7 W. 116
Schnepp, C. F. 2 s
Ridgefield Park, N. J.
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
51
Schneider, G. B. 2 s
112 Riverside Drive
Schneider, W. S. / a 120 W. 88
Schmid, A. R. 3 c 171 W. 71
Schoedler, L. II. 1 b
422 Ditmars a<ve., Steinway, L. I.
Schoonmaker, H. S. 3 s 201 W. 127
Schott, M. 3 t 60 St. Nicholas ave.
Schottland, J. ph
1270 Madison ave.
Schramm, E. 3 j 552 W. 141
Schramm, E. B. 4 b 510 W. 124
Schrenkeisen, F. G. 2 c 294 W. 92
Schreiber, W. ph 140 Lewis
Schroeder, L. C. 1 m
Schroeder, L. C. 1 m 607 W. 113
Schuler, M. W. 3 t 520 W. 123
Schultz, H. S. 3 c 604 W. 114
Schultz, L. C. 1 c 604 W. 114
Schulz, G. F. ph 218 W. 133
Schumacher, K. J. 2 s
174 St. Nicholas ave.
Schur, R. P. 2 c
4 Hamilton Terrace
Schureman, E. M. 4. t Whittier
Schuyler, E. p 156 Halsey, Bklyn.
Schwarie, J. J. 2 b 402 W. 124
Schwartz, L. L. pi 35 W. 119
Schwarz, H. 3 t
1125 Lexington ave.
Schwarz, H. F. ph 20 E. 61
Schwarz, J. O. 3 s
1038 Fifth ave.
Schwarz, R. 3 s 312 W. 99
Schwarz, W. M. 2 / 312 W. 99
Schwerin, N. P. ph
Broadway and 101
Scoril, C. B. 3 c Livingston
Scott, F. W. 1 m
New Brunswick, N. J.
Scott, J. W. A. 2 c 15 E. 229
Scott, T. K. 3 j 361 W. 121
Scribner, C. E. 2 / Livingston
Seabury, H. M. / a 417 W. 117
Seager, A. L. 3 t Whittier
Sears, J. D. pi Hartley
Seaton, C. M. pi 431 W. 121
Secor, M. R. ph Arlington, N. J.
Seekell, G. E. 3 t Whittier
Seelman, H. E. ph 410 4, Bklyn.
Segard, C. P. s 125 Manhattan
Seglin, G. M. 4 t
581 Boulevard, Bayonne
Seguine, E. C. 2 b
Rosebank, S. I.
Seidenberg, R. / a- 24 E. 99
Selder, H. B. nm c
Selig, S. 3 / Hartley
Sellers, B. M. 3 t 130 W. 96
Sellew, W. H. 3 c 78 E. 79
Selvage, N. 2 c
14 Osborne Terrace Newark, N.J.
Selvidge, R. W. 4 t Hartley
Semel, A. L. 2 s 1855 Seventh ave.
Seniza, F. C. p
136 Boulevard, Hoboken, N. J.
Serhey, B. 4 j Pocantico Hills, N. Y.
Seringhaus, E. H. p
954 Eighth ave.
Sessa, T. G. 4 c Hartley
Sessler, M. K. 1 c 1 W. 89
Setchanove, R. J. 3 c
1 1 15 Jennings, Bronx
Seveso, A. I b 43 Tillary, Bklyn.
Sewyn, O. M. 4 s 50 E. 91
Sexton, A. J. G. 2 c
172 Cleveland, Orange, N. J.
Seymour, R. B. 2 c
689 President, Bklyn.
Shafer, G. C. 2 / 145 Riverside Dr.
Shaffner, C. L. nm t Whittier
Shaiduroff, M. N. 2 j 153 E. 86
Shakespeare, N. E. 1 s
56 E. 238, Woodlawn
Shale, B. B. 3 b 955 West End ave.
Shapinsky, A. T. 2 /
1835 Seventh ave.
Shapiro, I. F. 1 m 181 Madison
Shapiro, L. M. 3 / 16 W. 115
Sharlitt, M. gr t 459 W. 123
Shaver, E. C. pi
687 Amsterdam ave.
Shavj, A. G. 2 b Brooks
Shavj, E. L. 2 b 411 W. 145
Shavj, G. M. I b White Plains, N. Y.
Shaw, J. M. 2 c 627 W. 115
Shaw, M. B. I b 411 W. 145
Shaw, R. C. 3 t Whittier
Sheehan, P. 2 / Hartley
Scheinman, L. 1 m 12 Jefferson
Sheldon, A. E. ph 313 W. 112
Sheldon, A. E. ph 313 W. 112
Shelley, L. D. 3 t 229 W. 115
Shelton, W. B. 2 / 51 E. 29
Shenton, H. N. pi Madison, N. J.
Sheridan, J. M. nm m 22 E. 190
Sherman, D. 4 t Whittier
Sherrer, F. Q. / Livingston
Sherwood, W. 3 t 526 W. 122
Shields, J. nm c 139 Christopher
Shientag, B. L. 3 / 106 W. 114
Shimmon, A. S. 4 c Hartley
Shively, M. R. 3 t 345 W. 122
Shoemaker, I. O. 3 t Whittier
52
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Shoenfeld, H. F. 2 c 14 E. 76
Shoninger, E. 4 t 52 W. 83
Shuntaro, H. pi 17 Concord, Bklyn.
Shurley, A. R. 1 c 47 W. 63
Shuto, S. 1 C 182 High, Bklyn.
Shwiizer, M. J c 16 E. 96
Sibbel, A. J. 3 m
1749 Topping ave.
Sibley, C. A. 4. t Whittier
Sicher, D. F. 2 / 533 W. 149
Sickels, K. H. 1 b
476 Central Park W.
Sidell, R. H. I b 223 W. 104
Siegel, A. B. 3 / 24 W. 94
Siegel, M. E. gr t
41 Center, Tottenville
Sieiuers, G. L. nm t Whittier
Sigafus, A. E. 3 t 510 W. 124
Silberberg, B. p 435 W. 123
Silberstein, N. gr t 32 W. 112
Silbernagel, L. 3 b 60 W. 96
Sillcox, C. M. 3 b 527 W. 121
Silleck, W. M. 4 772 19 W. 122
Silverman, H. 1 / 171 E. 81
Silverman, S. 2 b 45 E. 75
Simar, Th. E. 4 t
940 Amsterdam a<ve.
Simon, H. 1 s 22 Mt Morris ave.
Simons, I. 4 m
Simons, L. G. 4 t 180 IV. 88
Simpson, B. R. gr t Hartley
Simpson, E. 2 / 1831 Seventh ave.
Simpson, P. 1 s Hartley
Simpson, S. A. 3 t 501 IV. 123
Simpson, N. J. P. 4 J 544 W. 113
Simner, F. pi 503 W. 121
Singer, E. A. 3 t Whittier
Sinsabaugh, M. M. 3 t Whittier
Sitterly, E. F. ph
Lincoln ave., Flatlands, Bklyn.
Skinner, A. nm c
American Museum Nat. History
Skinner, E. L. 4 t Whittier
Skinner, H. C. 3 : Livingston
Skinner, R. W., Jr. 2 /
200 Lafayette ave., Bklyn.
Skutch, 1.4 c
998 Sterling Pi., Bklyn.
Slade, H. E. 3 s 519 W. 124
Slater, F. W. p
338 Lexington ave.
Slawter, Rose D. I b
46 W. Fourth, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Slaymaker, R. J. 4 t
Westfield, N. J.
Sloan, H. S. 2 c
240 Garfield Pi., Bklyn.
Sloane, C. O'C. 3 s Livingston
Sloane, F. J. 4 m 105 E. 69
Sloane, J. E. 4 c
55 Montrose ave., S. Orange
Slutsky, H. 1 c
627 Marcy ave., Bklyn.
Small, J. E. G. pi Union Theol.
Seminary, 700 Park ave.
Smallwood, R. F. / a 48 E. 57
Smart, A. M. 3 t JOI W. 80
Smead, H. B. 2 s Livingston
Smith, A. 1 / Livingston
Smith, Alex H. 2 s Hartley
Smith, A. J. 2 j Livingston
Smith, B. G. 3 t 205 Glenivood ave.,
East Orange, N. J.
Smith, B. H. 4 t Yonkers, N. Y.
Smith, B. T. 3 t Whittier
Smith, C. F. 4 t
10 St. Nicholas Terrace
Smith, D. F. nm b Brooks
Smith, E. 3 b 122 Washington,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Smith, E. B. 4 t Livingston
Smith, E. P. 2 c Livingston
Smith, E. I. 3 t I W. 72
Smith, F. C. 3 m
102 Monroe, Bklyn.
Smith, F. H. p 201 W. 94
Smith, F. M. ph 418 W. 118
Smith, F. Y. t
Smith, G. 2 c
19 Essex ave, Orange, N. J.-
Smith, H. D. / a 528 W. 123
Smith, H. F. gr t Livingston
Smith, J. A. nm s 293 E. 10
Smith, J. C. ph 430 Fourth, Bklyn.
Smith, J. H. pi 700 Park ave.
Smith, L. ph 1266 Amsterdam ave.
Smith, M. C, Jr. 4 s 1 57 W. 119
Smith, M. D. F. 3 c
25 Madison ave.
Smith, M. L. 3 t 540 W. 1 59
Smith, M. I. nm t 425 W. 118
Smith, R. L. pi
1292 Amsterdam ave.
Smith, W. M. p 2626 Broadway
Smith, W. M. 4 m
Smithers, A. E. 3 b 425 W. 144
S mi t hers, H. G. 3 b 425 W. 144
Smythe, R. H. fa
123 Amity, Bklvn.
Snead, C. G, Jr. 2 / 34 W. 136
Snevily, H. M. 4 c 616 W. 114
Snider, I. 3 t 181 E. Broadway
Snook, C. P. 4 s ' 565 W. 113
Snook, N. A. 3 t Teachers College
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
53
Snook, T. E., Jr. 2 s 605 W. 113
Snow, C. W. ph
N. Y. U. University Heights
Snyder, A. gr t
236 Tyler, Trenton, N. J.
Snyder, E. R. gr t
1249 Amsterdam ave.
Solis, M. E. c Fiora Ville, W. 116
Solomon, M. ph 24 E. 113
Solomons, C. B. 3 I Hotel Colonial,
Si and Columbus ave.
Sommers, S. A. nm I Hartley
Sonking, W. W. 2 s 605 W. 113
Sonn, C. H. I b 411 West End ave.
Soper, \V. B. 4 m 137 W. 14
Soule, E. W. 2 s 2020 Walton ave.
Souter, C. D. i /
277 Belleville ave., Newark
Spencer, F. B. 1 c
1 124 Tinton ave.
Spence, K. M. 2 / 320 W. 75
Spencer, C. B. 2 s
1 1 24 Tinton ave.
Spalding, L. F. 2 b iS Woodland
ave., New Rockelle, N. Y.
Spalding, S. H. 3 s 18 Woodland
ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
Spaulding, L. C. ph 411 W. 115
Spiegel, L. F. 2 /
887 West End ave.
Spiers, H. W. 1 m Hartley
Spingarn, Herman 1 /
184 Vernon ave., Bklyn.
Spingler, A. 4 t Whittier
Spetz, E. F. 2 /
265 Kosciusko, Bklyn.
Spitzer, B. 2 s 411 E. 88
Spooner, G. B. p Whittier
Sprague, W. B. 2 /
333 Sanford ave., Flushing, L. I.
Springer, A. p Whitier
Sprung, A. 2 s 126 W. 118
Squier, C. B. 2 c 140 W. 69
Staber, H. ph
Stableford, R. G., Jr. 2 c
8 Poplar, Bklyn.
Stadlet; B.F. 3 t 550 W. 148
Stafford, R. W. 2 s 306 W. 137
Stagen, R. M. I b 18 Castleton ave.,
West Brighton, S. I.
Stagg, H. J., Jr. 3 s
428 Central Park W.
Stair, B. W. ph Livingston
Stamm, C. L. 3 t 25 N. Seventh
ave., ML Vernon, N. Y.
Stanley, A. A. 3 t 41 W. 84
Stanley, E. O., Jr. 2 / 418 W. 118
Stanley, J. H. 1 / Livingston
Staples, II. F. 3 t Whittier
Stanton, P. D. nm b Roslyn, L. I.
S tap ft, II. 1 b 421 E. 76
Starbuck, W. L. 3 s 614 \V. 113
Star::, W. E. t
12 Cornell ave., Yonkers
Stauffer, Vernon ph
Union Theol. Sem., 700 Park ave.
Stayton, J. W. 4 c
61 Locust Hill ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
Stearn, M. F. 3 b
Van Corlear PL, Kingsbridge
Stearns, A. P. ph
Stearns, S. B. ph
53 Waller ave., White Plains
Steele, A. T. 4 t Whittier
Steele, E. 4 t
IQ2 Bloomfield ave., Passaic, N. J.
Steffens, J. A. ph
7224 Fifteenth ave., Bklyn.
Stehl, H. J. 1 m 150 E. 40
Steigman, B. M. 1 s
1600 Madison ave.
Stein, G. R. 4 b
2Q2 Manhattan ave.
Steinberg, P. 4 t
541 Monroe ave., Elizabeth, N. J.
Steinbrenner, E. L. 4 t Whittier
Steinecke, J. A. lb
551-2 Lynch, Bklyn.
Steiner, J. 3 c
40 Clay, Newark, N. J.
Steiner, S. H. 3 m 75 W. 183
Steinman, D. B. 3 s 324 E. 15
Steinmetz, F. C. 3 c 352 W. 19
Steinschneider, W. 2 s
2098 Valentine ave.
Steitz, A. ph 530 Linden, Bklyn.
Stepanek, B. ph 423 W. 118
Stephens, I. M. 3 t Whittier
Stephens, R. 1 c Hartley
Stephens, S. D., Jr. 1 c Hartley
Stephenson, R. 3 c 22 Bank
Stephenson, R. W. 2 c Hendrik
Hudson, no and Riverside Drive
Sternberg, E. 2 c
1323 Broadway, Bklyn.
Sterritt, J. E. 2 c
Stevenson, R. p 2881 Broadway
Stewart, Mrs. A. C. nm b 23 W. 84
Stewart, C. I b 180 Clare mont ave.
Stewart, J. L. 4 t Livingston
Stewart, N. 1 b 25Q W. II
Stewart, R. R. 1 c 467 W. 164
Stewart, W. E., Jr. 1 s
295 Jamaica ave., Astoria, L. I.
54
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Sticker, H. i c Livingston
Stickles, L. 2 c
957 Broad, Newark, N. J.
Stiles, B. C. 3 t Whittier
Stillman, A. L. 2 s
532 River, Hoboken, N. J.
Stimson, M. B. 2 b 68 W. 40
Stix, L. C. 4 s 496 West End ave.
Stock, J. W. 4 c
2710 Decatur ave., Bronx
Stoddard, O. S. 4 /
81 Ludlow, Yonkers
Stockly, H. A. 3 s 605 W. 113
Stoll, M. s -js E. 119
Stone, E. W. 1 c
1 128 Bedford ave., Bklyn.
Storer, H. M. 3 t Freeport, L. I.
Storey, D. H. 4 t 437 Sixth, Bklyn.
Stork, V. E. 3 m Hartley
Story, H. V. 2 c 307 W. 90
Story, M. 4 t 519 W. 121
Stout, R. A. ph
New Brunswick, N. J.
Stowell, A. R. 3 b Brooks
Stowell, D. D. 1 m 313 W. 70
Strasburger, A. nm c 66 E. 66
Strasburger, S. M. 1 c 411 W. 115
Strauss, M. J. 4 b 45 W. 68
Streeter, D. D. 3 c Livingston
Streeter, S. G. p
210 Sip ave., Jersey City
Strehan, G. E. 3 s
350 West. West Hoboken, N. J.
Streibert, E. K. 4 t Whittier
Streubel, Ernest J. ph
169 Lefferts ave., Bklyn.
Stringfellow, E. G. 3 t Whittier
Strippel, A. E. 1 s 102 E. 112
Strobel, R. L. nm s Livingston
Strong, A. Mel. 4 m 250 W. 82
S trope, A. 3 t 430 W. 124
Stroud, C. E. 4 t 417 W. 120
Struthers, H. H. 3 s 1 W. 132
Stryker, L. M. I b
Q Lake, White Plains
Stuart, C. E. 1 s 302 W. 116
Study, G. W. 3 / Livingston
Sturtevant, M. G. m
Sturtevant, W. P. 2 / 611 W. in
Suffern, A. E. 4 / 446 W. 124
Sugarman, M. H. / a
1648 Madison ave.
Sullivan, A. G. 3 m 23 W. 65
Sullivan, V. F. 2 c 130 E. 78
Sullo, N. A. 1 m 686 Eagle ave.
Sumner, C. m 137 W. 14
Sunderland, B. 3 t Whittier
Sutcliffe, A. B. gr t Hartley
Sutton, M. E. 4 t Whittier
Suydam, S. M. 4 t
c/o W. D. Suydam, 137 B'lvay
Suzuki, Y. ph 700 Park ave.
Swain, E. gr t Whittier
Swain, P. L. 2 / Livingston
Swanton, R. L. 2 c
124 St. James PL, Bklyn.
Swartwout, E. W. 4 s 558 W. 113
Swartwout, F. R. 4 c 558 W. 113
Swartwout, R. G. f a 558 W. 113
Sivartz, A. M. 4 t Whittier
Sweeney, M. M. 2 m 318 W. 23
Stvenson, M. E. 3 b
20Q Amity, Flushing, L. I.
Szvenson, S. J. 3 t
500 W. 121, c/o Mrs. Ball
Swick, D. A. 2 m
1683 Lexington ave.
Swift, P. E. 2 m
95 Winthrop, Bklyn.
Swords, A. T. 4 c
1390 Prospect ave.
Syverson, T. S. 2 s 605 W. 113
Szanto, S. 1 s
103 Ave. D, c/o Klein
Tachna, M. 1 / 35 W. in
Taggart, L. D. 3 t
30 Willow, Bklyn.
Takasugi, Y. pi 39 W. 9
Talcott, W. L. nm I
Cragsmoor, 419 W. 115
Tallant, L D. 2 s 614 W. 113
Talpey, E. M. 3 b 537 W. 123
Tamraz, E. ph 300 W. 117
Tannenbaum, S. W. 2 c 58 E. 123
Tanzer, H. H. ph 2Q4 W. 92
Tarbell, F. W. 4 m
Tate, A. D. ph 700 Park ave.
Tattershall, L. M. 4 b Brooks
Taylor, E. C. / a 544 W. 113
Taylor, E. W. nm s 544 W. 113
Taylor, H. G. p
Hawthorne, New York
Taylor, H. W. 3 c 156 E. 38
Taylor, J. S. ph
265 Linden ave., Bklyn.
Taylor, R. ph Livingston
Taylor, S. G. 2 c 334 W. 85
Taylor, S. P. is 123 W. 85
Telenko, Wm. fa 9-1 1 E. 107
Ten Brook, G. J. 4 m 402 W. 58
Ten Eick, C. A. 3 t 3 W . 122
Terry, A. H., Jr. 2 m 346 W. 57
Theobald, J. Jr. t 203 W. 108
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
55
Thomas, A. D. />/ Livingston
Thomas, D. pi 700 Park avc.
Thomas, D. S. 4 t Whittier
Thomas, H. A. 4 s 430 \V. 116
Thomas, J. J., Jr. 3 / 503 VV. 121
Thomas, P. B. nm c 430 W. 116
Thomas, W. L. 2 s 175 W. 72
Thompson, C. M. pi Whittier
Thompson, E. C. 3 s
304 State, Bklyn.
Thompson, G. 3 t 161 W. 103
Thompson, L. I. 3 b 103 W. 1 28
Thompson, L. S. s
1373 Washington ave., Bronx
Thompson, M. p
Norscmere, Ridgefield, N. J.
Thompson, M. M. 3 s
Norsemere, N. J.
Thompson, N. pi
St. Joseph's Seminary, Yonkers
Thompson, 0.2 b 163 W. 10$
Thompson, S. H. gr t 435 W. 123
Thompson, W. C. 1 s
Thompson, Wm. S. / a 116 W. 127
Thomson, E. 1 b 568 W. 161
Thomson, E. S. nm b Whittier
Thomson, J. L. 4 t 214 W. 128
Thomssen, E. G. p 607 W. 113
Thorne, E. F. I b
Washington ave., Nyack, N. Y.
Thorne, F. 4 t 503 W. 122
Thorne, N. I b
418 St. Nicholas ave.
Thornton, A. E. nm l Livingston
Thornton, S. F. c
229 Hinsdale, Bklyn.
Threll, I. 3 s 66 E. 114
Tiemann, K. H. I b
208 St. John's PI, Bklyn.
Tiffany, J. de F. nm b 27 E. 72
Tilney, F. p 47 Pierrepont, Bklyn.
Titsvjorth, S. S. pi
47 Claremont ave.
Tobey, K. H. gr t Whittier
Tobias, D. F. 2 s 132 W. 126
Todd, H. C. c Livingston
Todd, J. C. pi Brentwood, L. I.
Todd, N. M. 3 t 1006 E. 151
Tomes, M. A. nm t 328 W. 57
Tompkins, G. B. 4 m
104 Park ave., Paterson
Tooker, N. B. 2 m 231 W. 69
Tooker, H. C. c 343 Broadway
Tortora, A. T. 3 c 315 E. 53
Touart, M. D. 4 m 306 W. 56
Tough, F. B. 3 s 519 W. 121
Townsend, C. 3 t 511 W. 122
Townsend, E. B. 4 c Hartley
Toivnsend, E. 4 t Whittier
Townsend, J. W. 1 m 7 W. 87
Traitcl, L. 4 b 58 W. 95
Trapp, M. 3 t Whittier
Travis, C. M. 2 /
146 Quincy, Bklyn.
Tredivell, E. A. S. T. nm b
57 W. 106
Tripp, L. E. 4 t 525 W. 123
Tripp, M. O. p
Lincoln Park, Yonkers
Tripp, W. A. 3 c
103 Monroe, Bklyn.
Troeger, E.E. 4 t 507 W. 124
Trosk, Charles ph
1631 Eighth ave., Bklyn.
Trosl:, C. 2 /
1 63 1 Eighth ave., Bklyn.
Trott, J. C. / a
668 Park PI., Bklyn.
Trotticr, T. 3 t 501 W. 122
Trowbridge, M. C. 3 t Whittier
Trowbridge, S. D. / a 76 W. 105
Troy, L. L. 4 t 525 W. 123
True, R. S. 2 c 328 W. 83
Truesdell, W. B. p
1508 Amsterdam ave.
Tschudy, E. A. 1 s 209 E. 45
Tuchton, I. B. 3 t Whittier
Tucker, D. G. 1 / 126 W. 8s
Tupper, A. G. 3 s
T upper, H. A. 3 t 109 W. 102
Tupper, W. D. 1 s
79 Chestnut, East Orange
Turnbull, A. G. 4 b
Tuckahoe, N. Y.
Turnbull, L. S. 3 b
Tuckahoe, N. Y.
Turner, J. E. ph
521 Clinton ave., Bklyn.
Turner, J. P. ph 421 W. 121
Turner, P. A. 4 m
Turpin, A. E. 3 c 150 E. 18
Tuthill, B. C. 3 c 176 W. 86
Tuttle, G. C. 1 / 21 W. 36
Twaddle, H. W. 3 t Ossining
Tyler, S. E. ph 1027 Park ave.
Tyreen, J. L. ph
178 1 Sedgewick ave.
rianoff, F. ph 648 E. 183
Ulanov, N. / a 1771 Madison ave.
Ullman, K. B. 1 / Hartley
Ullmann, A., Jr. 3 s
Overlook Terrace, Yonkers
56
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
Ullmann, E. A. 2 s
Roberts ave., Yonkers
Ulrich, C. A. ph
1850 Fifty-ninth, Bklyn.
Under hill, A. 3 t Ossining, N. Y.
Underwood, A. 3 b
10 Stephen, Belleville, N. J.
Underwood, E. S. pi 563 W. 173
Ungar, George F. 1 c 14 E. 47
Ungard, Mancusi, M. 1 s
86 Mt. Prospect ave., Newark
Untermyer, F. / 675 Fifth ave.
Utter, H. E. 2 m 22 W. 60
Utterback, T. E. gr t 519 W. 135
Uyematsu, Y. pi
17 Concord, Bklyn.
Vail, E. 4 t 507 W. 124
Vail, Le R. B. \ m 185 Steuben
Valde's A. P. 1 s
200 Riverside Drive
Valentine, C. H. 1 s Hartley
Valentine, H. D. ph
2324 82, Bklyn.
Van Anda, J. B. I b 344. W. 72
Van Beuren, U. B. 3 s
908 Bloomfield, Hoboken
Van Buskirk, A. S. I b 21 W. 123
Vance, R. A. t 124 W. 30
Vanderbilt, S. B. t 216 IV. 103
Vanderburgh, F. ph 53 Washington
Van Dewater, W. C. / Livingston
Van Etten, R. C. 2 m 22 W. 60
Van Keuren, H. P. T. 3 s
616 W. 114
Van Kleeck, E. 2 c 4 W. 123
Van Nuys, C. C. p Livingston
Van Tine, A. A. 4 c
567 West End ave.
Van Tine, H. 1 c
567 West End ave.
Van Vort, R. V. nm t Whittier
Van Vosburgh, L. M. 3 t
406 W. 124
Van Zandt, P. G. ph
700 Park ave.
Vamer, C. E. pi Whittier
Vehslage, H. E. 3 s 136 W. 70
Veith, H.I. 4 b
1081 Washington ave., Bronx
Ventus, A. B. ph Bloomfield, N. J.
Vernon, R. Y. ph Florida, N. Y.
Ver Planck, G. A. 3 b
White Plains, N. Y.
Vexler, F. ph 54 E. 3
Vietor, J. A. 1 m 28 W. 53
Vina, T. A. 3 m 137 W. 61
Vincent, H. G. 2 / Livingston
Vincberg, S. pi 319 W. 116
Vogel, H. / a 51 E. 129
Vogel, O. M. 1 s Livingston
Volker, H. J. 1 s
94 So. Highland ave., Ossining.
Volz, H. C. / a Greenwich, Conn.
vom Baur, E. E. 3 b 18 W. 130
von Galberger, T. pi 504 W. 112
von Malmborg, C. A. 2 s
477 Central Park W.
von Muffling, E. A. 2 s
974 E. 19, Flatbush
von Saltza, P. W. 2 s
770 St. Nicholas ave.
von Schrenk, T. 3 ;
140 East End ave.
von Unvoerth, F. ph 527 W. 121
Vose, J. C. 1 b 134 Decatur, Bklyn.
Voskamp, J. A. 2 s 167 E. 75
Voss, E. R. 4 t Whittier
Vulte, G. P. 3 s
33 Park ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
Wachner, E. M. 2 c 138 E. 48
Wade, S. F. 3 m 346 W. 57
Wadelton, N. L. I b
Bronxville, N. Y.
Wadsworth, I. C. 4 t
125 Manhattan
Wadsworth, I. C. 4 t
Wagner, J. A. 2 b 236 E. 3 1
Wahlig, R. C. 2 s
1562 Crotona Park E.
Watte, E. A. I b Brooks
Waite, M.G. 3 t
30 Homestead Park, Newark
Waitt, W. H. 2 s Livingston
Wales, M. A. 3 t 500 W. 121
Walker, E. W. 1 /
675 Flatbush ave., Bklyn.
Wall, W. B. 1 s 522 W. 134
Wallace, H. H. 4 t 238 W. 48
Wallace, L. B. nm t 125 E. 24
Wallin, A. R. ph
Kenilworth, N. J.
Wallis, J. E., Jr. 1 s
Walsh, J. H. 1 c 119 E. 60
Walter, H. W. 3 s Livingston
Walters, R. E. 2 s 530 W. 123
Walther, J. W. 3 m
431 Hopkins ave.
Walton, J. B. pi 540 E. 76
Ward, E. H. 3 t 522 W. 123
Ward, M. H. 1 m 129 W. 64
Ward, W. T. 4 m 118 W. 64
DIRECTORY OF STUDENTS
57
VVardell, W. S., Jr. 3 c
25 Waverley Place, Orange
Wardlaw, F. A., Jr. 2 s
60S W. 113
Wardner, D. M. 3 m
Pel ham Manor, N. Y.
Ware, E. E. pi Whiitier
Ware, F. 4 c 1285 Madison ave.
Waring, A. J. 4 m 137 W. 14
Waring, R. A. 3 t 336 E. 17
Warren, E. L. 2 m 350 W. 71
Warren, G. H., Jr. 2 c
924 Fifth ave.
Washington, H. J. L. 2 c
141 Riverside Drive
Wassam, C. W. pi 415 W. 115
Watson, G. L. I b
New Brighton, S. I.
Watson, M. D. 3 c 159 Ninth ave.
Way, H. D. / a 524 W. 123
Wayt, H.l.2 b
54 Woolsey, Astoria
Weaks, M. C. pi Whittier
Weaver, G. M. 1 s 170 W. 95
Weaver, J. A. 1 s 11 33 Broadway
Weaver, P. 4 c
25 Jefferson ave., Bklyn.
Weaver, R. M. 3 t
12 Jumel Terrace
Webb, H. W. p 509 W. 124
Webb, R. D. 2 c 248 W. 102
Webber, W. T. nm c 515 W. 139
Weber, R. H. / a
1 River View Terrace
Webster, D. H. 2 m
308 Madison ave.
Webster, J. McB. 1 s
752 West End ave.
Webster, L. S. 2 s
1453 Lexington ave.
Webster-Powell, A. f a
QI5 President, Bklyn.
Wechsler, L. A. 2 s 122 W. 85
Weed, D. V., Jr. 2 s 451 W. 162
Weeks, F. L. 4 t
154 De Bevoise ave., Astoria
Weeks, W. W. 3 c 46 E. 57
Weiher, H. A. / a 76 E. 86
Weil, A. 1 b 303 W. 100
Weil, J. 3 / 224 E. 60
Weild, D. ph 359 Hancock, Bklyn.
Weingart, J. S. 2 m
2041 Seventh ave.
Weinstein, D. 3 c 2041 Fifth ave.
Weinstein, J. 2 s
7<>o Westchester ave.
Weinstein, M. 2 b Brooks
Weisman, Charles p
153 Atlantic ave., Bklyn.
Weiss, B. 1 s 79 E. Seventh
Welch, E. N. 1 c 45 Fifth ave.
Welch, E. W. 1 s (Commuter)
Weld, L. D. H. pi
1 1 15 Amsterdam ave.
Weldin, W. 4 t ' Whittier
Welles, F. C. 2 /
658 West End ave.
Wellington, H. W. 1 m 544 W. 113
Wellington, L. 3 t Whittier
Wells, G. 4 b 124 W. 77
Wells, G. F. gr t Hartley
Wells, H. E. 4 b Keyport, N. J.
Wells, J. D. 2 / Livingston
Weltner, P. R. 1 / Earle
Wendel, B. F., M.D. 1 m 166 W. 65
Wendel, C. E. ph 458 First, Bklyn.
Werner, P. C. 2 c Manhattan Sq.
Werner, O. V. 3 c
2592 Atlantic ave., Bklyn.
Wessa, A. 3 t 420 W. 121
Wessler, H. 4 m 40 E. 127
West, C. L. 3 t 234 Broad, Newark
West, D. 3 m 231 W. 69
West, H. J. 3 s 170 W. 85
West, J.R. 2 b 552 W. 186
Westaiuay, L. B. 3 b
803 Fifty-eighth, Bklyn.
Westcott, G. E. / a Livingston
Westcott, J. V. 2 s 413 W. 117
Weston, E. G. 3 b 228 W. 141
Wetherill, F. N. pi 175 Ninth ave.
Weymann, L. C. I b 148 E. 16
Wharton, W. P. gr t 168 W. 85
Wheeler, G. M. 4 t 431 W. 121
Wheeler, I. c 165 and Broadway
Wheeler, J. L. 4 c 616 W. 114
Wheeler, M. 3 / Livingston
Wheeler, M. H. 4 t Whittier
Wheeler, W. H. 2 s 165 and Broad
Whipple, A. O. 4 m 231 W. 69
Whipple, D. W. 2 s 544 W. 113
Whipps, W. O. 2 c 605 W. 113
Whitaker, F. P. 3 / Grantwod, N. J.
White, C. W. / a Summit, N. J.
White, F. C. pi 1400 Clinton ave.
White, J. L. 3 m
Perth Amboy. N. J.
White, M. L. 3 s 559 W. 141
White, T. K. 1 s Foot of E. 16
White, R. L. 3 s 559 W. 141
White, W. C. L. 4 r
68 Woodbine, Bklyn.
White, W. J. ph
42 Grand ave., Englewood
58
SUMMARY OF STUDENTS
Whitehead, F. E. ph
z Locust St., Morristown, N. J.
Whiteside, D. G. ph 541 W. 124
Whitford, E. E. p 523 W. 151
Whitlock, B. McE. 1 c 43 E. 87
Whitmore, C. W. pi 175 Ninth ave.
Whitney, G. C. 4 m 145 W. 61
Whiton, E. S. gr t Hartley
Whiton, A. S. / a 309 W. 93
Whittemore, E. B. nm t
Riverside and 135
Wicke, C. 2 / 34 E. 68
Wickenden, A. A. 2 s 7 E. 39
Wickham, J. F. ph Hartley
Wickham, R. E. p 530 W. 123
Widdowson, J. 4 t 530 W. 124
Wiehle, A. L. V. 2 s 106 W. 57
Wiener, H. J. 2 m 14 E. 60
Wiesner, A. 2 b
12 Union ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Wilbur, C. L. gr t Whittier
Wilcox, W. H. ph
Wilcox, W. S. 4 t Whittier
Wilder, Geo. F. p
Flatbush ave., near Church
Wildman, H. V., Jr. 2 c 108 W. 94
Wilds, R. H. 2 m 365 W. 55
Wile, H. 4 t Whittier
Wile, W. D. 2 c 332 W. 88
Wiley, Wm. H. 3 t
Tarrytown, N. Y.
Wilkerson. F. W. 3 m 25 W. 65
Willard, G. L. ph 97 Clark, Bklyn.
Willcox, M. S. 4 t Whittier
Willett, E. M. 3 t 430 W. 122
Willets, G. I b 34 Mamaroneck
ave., White Plains, N. Y.
Williams, B. C. ph Whittier
Williams, B. P. 3 t 209 W. 129
Williams, C. L. 3 /
27 So. Clinton, East Orange
Williams, G. M. 1 s
171 Underhill ave., Bklyn.
Williams, H. 2 s Livingston
Williams, I. nm t Whittier
Williams, M. E. ph 24 W. 61
Williams, R. G. 3 s 531 W. 113
Williams, S. E. 3 I 200 W. 130
Williams, T. W. 2 s Livingston
Williamson, D. B. 3 s 450 W. 153
Williamson, G. 4 s 558 W. 113
Williamson, N. E. 4 t Whittier
Willis, B. 2 c Hartley
Willis, E. M. t 519 W. 121
Wills, E. G. 4 t Whittier
Wilselthier, M. L. 3 m 215 W. 10
Wilson, J. E. 4 s
54 Morningside ave.
Wilson, J. F. gr t 94 Hamilton PI.
Wilson, J. R. 4 t
727 E. 23, Paterson
Wilson, M. 3 b
107 Spruce, Newark
Wilson, M. B. 1 b Brooks
Wilson, T. A. 2 s 256-258 W. 97
Wilson, W. 4 s 149 E. 52
Wilson, N. H. pi
268 Arlington ave., Bklyn.
Wilson, W. H. 4 t
365 Pacific, Paterson
Winchell, C. E. 4 c
Winchell, C. M. 3 t
176 Elm ave., Mount Vernon
Winchell, F. E. 3 t
176 Elm ave., Mount Vernon
Windels, P. W. H. 4 c
162 Lee ave., Bklyn.
W indie, A. E. 4 t 94 Lawrence
Winslow, W. S. 4 s 614 W. 113
Winter, N. / a 201 W. 79
Winter, W. E. 4 t
Wise, B. D. 2 / 154 W. 76
Wise, hi. B. I b
I JO Central Park W.
Wise, S. L. 1 s 28 E. 63
Wiseman. J. S. 3 t Hartley
Wisendanger, E. V. ph
Woodmere, L. I.
Witcher, L. W. 3 i Whittier
Wolbarst, E. S. 2 c 24 E. 119
Wolfe, V. L. 4 t J156 Third ave.
Wolferz, L. E. 4 c
497 Hart, Bklyn.
Wolff, F. M. 4 b Brooks
Wolff, L. J. 2 / 744 Park PI., Bklyn.
Wood, A. E. nm c
224 17, College Point, N. Y.
Wood, H. 3 b 103 and B'way
Wood, S. pi Newdorp, S. I.
Wood, T. C. 2 s
Riverside Drive and no
Wood, W. L. 4 c 612 W. 116
Wood, J. M., Jr. 4 c
162 Cleveland, Bklyn.
Woodburv, W. B. 4 c Hartley
Woodford, H. T. f a
112 Claremont ave., Mt. Vernon
Woodhull, H. 2 b 501 W. 120
Woodhull, M. 3 b 501 W. 120
Woodman, L. E. p 524 W. 123
Woodroofe, R. W. pi 312 W. 20
Woodson, E. 4 t Whittier
DIRECTORY OF STUDEXTS
59
H'oolsey, C. B. 4 b
Engleu-ood, X. J.
Worcester, J. N. 2 m 356 \V. 57
Work. N. P. 4 /
180 Woodworth ave., Yonkers
Wormser, I. M. 2 / 19 \V. 91
Worrell, H. D. 1 b 2014 Fifth ave.
Woticky, C. 4 s 445 E. S7
it, C. H. 3 t Summit, X. J.
Jit, E. H. ph Hartley
Wright, W. R. is 55 W. 10
Wronker, B. M. 3 m 261 W. 127
Wuppermar.n, C. S. 4 c 2 W. S6
Wurthmann, J. W. 1 m
1 166 First ave.
Jf'yckoff, E. 4 t Ji'hittier
Wye, T. E. pi ph 435 W. 123
Wyeth, F. S. 3 b
244 Lexington ave.
Wylie, J. D. 3 b 10 W. 96
Yates, M. H. 4 b 205 W. IOI
Yergason, R. M. 3 m 346 W. 57
Yerinston, H. H. 4 m 231 W. 69
Yokel, A. 2 c 6S Kosciusko, Bklyn.
Yokota, Seirnatsu 521 W. 123
Yokoyama. Y. 24 W. 59
Youmans, G. L. 3 s East Orange
Young, E. D. gr t 71 E. 96
Young, J. J. 4 j
Cook ave., Elmhurst, X. Y.
Young, J. M. 4 b
336 FenimoTC, Bklyn.
Yoxall, E. gr t H'hitlier
Zaccara, A. 4 c 320 E. 25
Zach, L. M. 2 s
1414 Eastern Parkway, Bklyn.
Zandstra, S. ph 700 Park ave.
Zangler, E. C. 3 b
Croton-on-Hudson, X. Y.
Zelaya, A. 4 m 337 W. 5$
Zelenko, fa 9 E. 107
Ziegler, W. H. 1 c
166 Congress, Bklyn.
Zimber, Frank E. 2 s 417 W. 117
Zimmermann, F. L. 1 s Livingston
Zimmermann, H. B. 3 m Hartley
Zink, A. / a 604 Tinton ave., Bronx
Zion, E. H. 2 / 249 W. 21
Zipris, V. V. 2 c 53 Lenox ave.
Zirulick, H. p 25S Henry
Zobel, A. R. 3 t 1008 Simpson
Zogbaum, F. 1 J 125 W. i ~
SUMMARY
OFFICERS
Professors 155
Adjunct Professors 64
Clinical Professors and Lecturers 14
Instructors 86
Demonstrators 11
Tutors 39
Curators 2
Lecturers and other Special Officers of Instruction 30
Assistants 71
Clinical Assistants 73
University Officers of Instruction 545
Other Instructors in Teachers College 56
Other Instructors in College of Pharmacy 3
604
University Officers of Administration 17
Other Officers of Administration, Teachers College and
College of Pharmacy 8
25
Emeritus Officers 17
Total 646
Horace Mann School and Speyer School {not included
above) 79
STUDENTS
Columbia College:
Fourth-year class 107
Third-year " 147
Second-year " 171
First-year " 153
Non-matriculated 47
625
The School of Law:
Third-year class 63
Second-year " 34
First-year " 84
Non-matriculated 17
248
Carried forward 873
60
SUMMARY OF STUDENTS 6l.
Brought forward 873
The School of Medicine:
Fourth-year class 78
Third-year " 77
Second-year " 67
First-year " 60
Non-matriculated 8
290
The Schools of Applied Science:
Fourth-year class 63
Third-year " 129
Second-year " 193
First-year " 185
Non-matriculated 22
592
Fine Arts:
Architecture 96
Music 22
118
The Graduate Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy,
and Pure Science 910
Total 2783
Barnard College 418
Teachers College 830
College of Pharmacy
(Not included in Directory) 228
Total 4259
Deduct Double Registration 172
Net Total of Resident Students 4087
Summer Session Students, 1907 1392
Deduct Double Registration 320
Grand Total of Resident Students 5159
Students in extension courses 2817
October 24 1907.
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